Abstract
The post-mortem inspection of domestic pigs within the European Union was revised in 2014, primarily to include visual meat inspection of each carcase and offal. Palpations and incisions were removed from routine meat inspection procedures, as they are mostly used to detect pathological lesions caused by organisms irrelevant for public health, and instead can cause cross-contamination of carcases with foodborne pathogens. However, examination of all external surfaces of the carcase and organs, declaration of patho-physiological lesions as unfit for human consumption, and possibility for minimal handling of carcases and offals were held in place. In addition, the European Food Safety Authority suggested that palpation and incisions should be performed outside the slaughter line, but this was not incorporated in the revised legislation. We surveyed in 2014 the opinions of meat inspectors and veterinarians using an online questionnaire to determine what practical measures are required for the visual meat inspection procedure and when meat inspection staff consider additional palpations and incisions necessary. Based on the survey, turning the carcase and organs or technical arrangements such as mirrors were seen necessary to view all external surfaces. In addition, the pluck set cannot be trimmed on the side line. Local lesions, such as abscesses and lesions in the lymph nodes, signs of systemic infection and lymphoma, were the major lesions requiring additional post-mortem meat inspection procedures. Meat inspection personnel raised concerns on the poor quality of food chain information and export requirements demanding palpations and incisions. The efficient use of visual meat inspection requires legislation to better support the implementation and application of it, changes in the slaughter line layout and a possibility to classify incoming pig batches based on their risk.
Highlights
The post-mortem inspection procedure for slaughtered domestic pigs within the European Union was revised in 2014 (EC No 854/2004; EU No 219/2014)
The revision was based on the scientific opinion of the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), which stated that the most important public health risks in pork, namely Salmonella spp., Yersinia enterocolitica, Toxoplasma gondii and Trichinella spp., cannot be identified during traditional post-mortem inspection including incisions and palpations (EFSA 2011)
The official veterinarians and meat inspectors that answered the questionnaire represent five slaughterhouses that together slaughter over 95% of pigs in Finland (Supplementary info 1, Supplementary material)
Summary
The post-mortem inspection procedure for slaughtered domestic pigs within the European Union was revised in 2014 (EC No 854/2004; EU No 219/2014). Food Safety Department, Finnish Food Authority, Helsinki, Finland EFSA recommended that when palpations and incisions are necessary they should
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