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Assessment of Hygienic Practices in Beef Cattle Slaughterhouses and Retail Shops in Bishoftu, Ethiopia: Implications for Public Health

Understanding the potential drivers of microbial meat contamination along the entire meat supply chain is needed to identify targets for interventions to reduce the number of meatborne bacterial outbreaks. We assessed the hygienic practices in cattle slaughterhouses (28 employees) and retail shops (...

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Published in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2021-03, Vol.18 (5), p.2729
Main Authors: Gutema, Fanta D, Agga, Getahun E, Abdi, Reta D, Jufare, Alemnesh, Duchateau, Luc, De Zutter, Lieven, Gabriël, Sarah
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description Understanding the potential drivers of microbial meat contamination along the entire meat supply chain is needed to identify targets for interventions to reduce the number of meatborne bacterial outbreaks. We assessed the hygienic practices in cattle slaughterhouses (28 employees) and retail shops (127 employees) through face-to-face interviews and direct personal observations. At the slaughterhouses, stunning, de-hiding and evisceration in vertical position, carcass washing and separate storage of offal were the identified good practices. Lack of hot water baths, absence of a chilling room, infrequent hand washing, insufficiently trained staff and irregular medical check-up were practices that lead to unhygienic handling of carcasses. At the retail shops, cleaning equipment using soap and hot water (81%), storing unsold meat in refrigerators (92%), concrete floors and white painted walls and ceilings were good practices. Adjacently displaying offal and meat (39%), lack of a cold chain, wrapping meat with plastic bags and newspapers, using a plastic or wooden cutting board (57%), infrequent washing of equipment and floors, and inadequately trained employees were practices that could result in unhygienic handling of beef. Our study identified unhygienic practices both at the slaughterhouses and retail shops that can predispose the public to meatborne infections, which could be improved through training and implementation of quality control systems.
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subjects Abattoirs
Animals
Beef
Beef cattle
Carcasses
Cattle
Ceilings
Consumption
Control systems
Developing countries
Employees
Ethiopia
Floors
Food contamination
Food contamination & poisoning
Food Microbiology
Hot water
Hygiene
LDCs
Meat
Microbial contamination
Microorganisms
Pathogens
Public Health
Quality control
Questionnaires
Refrigerators
Sociodemographics
Storage
Supply chains
Vertical orientation
Water baths
Water shortages
title Assessment of Hygienic Practices in Beef Cattle Slaughterhouses and Retail Shops in Bishoftu, Ethiopia: Implications for Public Health
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