Americans Reassured No Tainted Brazilian Meat Has Entered US
23 Mar 2017 --- Yesterday (Mar 22), the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) announced additional steps to keep the food supply safe for American families in light of the recent investigations of Brazil’s meat industry.
Confirming that none of the slaughter or processing facilities implicated in the Brazilian scandal have shipped meat products to the US, FSIS immediately instituted additional pathogen testing of all shipments of raw beef and ready-to-eat products from Brazil upon hearing reports of the Brazilian investigation.
FSIS has also increased its examination of all these products at ports-of-entry across the country. The agency will indefinitely maintain its 100% re-inspection and pathogen testing of all lots of FSIS-regulated products imported from Brazil.
"Keeping food safe for American families is our top priority,” said Mike Young, Acting Deputy Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. “FSIS has strengthened the existing safeguards that protect the American food supply as a precaution and is monitoring the Brazilian government's investigation closely.”
“FSIS will take any additional actions necessary to protect public health,” adds Al Almanza, Acting Deputy Under Secretary for Food Safety. “It is our mission to keep the food on American dinner tables safe.”
Although none of the establishments implicated in the Brazil scandal have shipped meat products to the United States, effective March 18, FSIS instituted 100% point-of-entry re-inspection of all Brazilian beef imported into the United States, including conducting product examination on 100% of the lots.
This re-inspection includes 100% testing of beef trimmings from Brazil for Salmonella, E. coli O157:H7, and non-O157 shiga-toxin producing E. coli (STEC). The 100% re-inspection also includes 100% testing of ready-to-eat products from Brazil for Salmonella and Listeria monocytogenes. FSIS will take immediate action to refuse entry of product into the United States if there are findings of food safety concern.
As the fallout from the Brazilian meat scandal continues, Switzerland has joined the list of countries introducing a partial ban or restrictions on beef and chicken exports from the country. Earlier this week, FoodIngredientsFirst, reported how Chile, China and the EU had moved quickly to restrict meat from Brazilian meat processing facilities involved in the adulteration scandal.
Read FoodIngredientsFirst initial story on the meat adulteration controversy here.
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