Osterholm Michael T, Ostrowsky Julie, Farrar Jeff A, Gravani Robert B, Tauxe Robert V, Buchanan Robert L, Hedberg Craig W
Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, School of Public Health, University of Minnesota, 420 Delaware Street S.E., Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455, USA.
J Food Prot. 2009 Jul;72(7):1509-12. doi: 10.4315/0362-028x-72.7.1509.
An independent collaborative approach was developed for stimulating research on high-priority food safety issues. The Fresh Express Produce Safety Research Initiative was launched in 2007 with $2 million in unrestricted funds from industry and independent direction and oversight from a scientific advisory panel consisting of nationally recognized food safety experts from academia and government agencies. The program had two main objectives: (i) to fund rigorous, innovative, and multidisciplinary research addressing the safety of lettuce, spinach, and other leafy greens and (ii) to share research findings as widely and quickly as possible to support the development of advanced safeguards within the fresh-cut produce industry. Sixty-five proposals were submitted in response to a publicly announced request for proposals and were competitively evaluated. Nine research projects were funded to examine underlying factors involved in Escherichia coli O157:H7 contamination of lettuce, spinach, and other leafy greens and potential strategies for preventing the spread of foodborne pathogens. Results of the studies, published in the Journal of Food Protection, help to identify promising directions for future research into potential sources and entry points of contamination and specific factors associated with harvesting, processing, transporting, and storing produce that allow contaminants to persist and proliferate. The program provides a model for leveraging the strengths of industry, academia, and government to address high-priority issues quickly and directly through applied research. This model can be productively extended to other pathogens and other leafy and nonleafy produce.
为推动对高优先级食品安全问题的研究,开发了一种独立协作方法。“鲜食农产品安全研究倡议”于2007年启动,获得了来自行业的200万美元无限制资金,并由一个科学顾问小组进行独立指导和监督,该小组由来自学术界和政府机构的全国知名食品安全专家组成。该计划有两个主要目标:(i)资助针对生菜、菠菜和其他绿叶蔬菜安全问题的严谨、创新和多学科研究;(ii)尽快广泛分享研究结果,以支持鲜切农产品行业先进保障措施的发展。针对公开征集的提案,共收到65份提案,并进行了竞争性评估。9个研究项目获得资助,以研究生菜、菠菜和其他绿叶蔬菜中大肠杆菌O157:H7污染的潜在因素以及预防食源性病原体传播的潜在策略。发表在《食品保护杂志》上的研究结果,有助于确定未来研究的有前景方向,包括污染的潜在来源和进入点,以及与农产品收获、加工、运输和储存相关的特定因素,这些因素使得污染物得以持续存在和扩散。该计划为利用行业、学术界和政府的优势,通过应用研究快速直接地解决高优先级问题提供了一个模式。这种模式可以有效地扩展到其他病原体以及其他叶菜类和非叶菜类农产品。