The Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy has released expanded guidance recommendations on how to control pathogens for processors.

The 90-page guide – “Controlling Pathogens in Dairy Processing Environments: Guidance for the U.S. Dairy Industry” – was authored by a team of dairy industry and sanitary design experts. It builds upon previous guidance that focused on Listeria monocytogenes to include best practices to control Salmonella and Cronobacter Sakazakii.
The initiative was led by the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy, an organization founded by dairy farmers in 2008 to convene the entire industry on common goals and opportunities.
“This is an important document for the industry that could not have come to life without the collaboration and leadership of several dairy industry food safety experts,” said David Kedzierski, Vice President, Food Safety and Regulatory Affairs for Agri-Mark, Inc./Cabot Creamery.
The guidance focuses on best practices for the separation of raw and ready-to-eat products, good manufacturing practices (GMP), sanitary facility and equipment design, principles of cleaning and sanitation and environmental monitoring programs.
The guide includes easy-to-use checklists and is designed to be a one-stop reference document that the dairy industry can use to improve existing food safety programs to ensure adequate control of environmental pathogens.
Copies can be downloaded at www.usdairy.com/foodsafety for free.
For information or questions, contact Tim Stubbs (tim.stubbs@dairy.org) or Chad Galer (chad.galer@dairy.org) with the Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy.
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Innovation Center for U.S. Dairy® is a forum that brings together the dairy community to address the changing needs and expectations of consumers through a framework of shared best practices and accountability. Initiated in 2008 by dairy farmers through the dairy checkoff, we collaborate on efforts that are important both to us and our valued customers – issues like animal care, food safety, nutrition and health, the environment and economics. The Innovation Center is committed to continuous improvement from farm to table, striving to ensure a socially responsible and economically viable dairy community.

Keith Poulsen’s jaw dropped when farmers showed him images on their cellphones at the World Dairy Expo in Wisconsin in October.

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