Article ID: | iaor201112400 |
Volume: | 31 |
Issue: | 2 |
Start Page Number: | 237 |
End Page Number: | 254 |
Publication Date: | Feb 2011 |
Journal: | Risk Analysis |
Authors: | Billoir Elise, Denis Jean-Baptiste, Cammeau Natalie, Cornu Marie, Zuliani Veronique |
Keywords: | agriculture & food, simulation: applications, stochastic processes, risk |
To assess the impact of the manufacturing process on the fate of Listeria monocytogenes, we built a generic probabilistic model intended to simulate the successive steps in the process. Contamination evolution was modeled in the appropriate units (breasts, dice, and then packaging units through the successive steps in the process). To calibrate the model, parameter values were estimated from industrial data, from the literature, and based on expert opinion. By means of simulations, the model was explored using a baseline calibration and alternative scenarios, in order to assess the impact of changes in the process and of accidental events. The results are reported as contamination distributions and as the probability that the product will be acceptable with regards to the European regulatory safety criterion. Our results are consistent with data provided by industrial partners and highlight that tumbling is a key step for the distribution of the contamination at the end of the process. Process chain models could provide an important added value for risk assessment models that basically consider only the outputs of the process in their risk mitigation strategies. Moreover, a model calibrated to correspond to a specific plant could be used to optimize surveillance.