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Biosecurity measures protect farms, food and people

NEWBERRY — Cleanliness, it’s said, is next to godliness. It also can save lives — untold numbers, in fact.

On farms and food processing and handling facilities, this kind of cleanliness is more than just washing your hands. It’s full-fledged biosecurity and it’s changing the way farmers involved in animal agriculture work.

“Biosecurity procedures are fundamental to the prevention of disease and the safety of animals and food,” said Boyd Parr, South Carolina state veterinarian and director of Clemson University Livestock Poultry Health (LPH). “They’re designed to prevent the spread of disease onto an animal agriculture site, between animals on a site and from one site to another.”

The pathogens that cause disease are everywhere: in air or water, among animals and birds, on clothes and shoes, hands and feet, even on cars and trucks. The tiniest virus, bacterium or fungus can hitch a ride onto a farm unnoticed until it causes an outbreak of disease.

Consider the challenge of minimizing all these threats on, say, a 3,500-acre dairy farm with 35 employees who milk nearly 1,500 cows three times a day.

That’s not just an illustration. That’s the Satterwhite Farm in Newberry County, where Parr and other veterinarians addressed more than 150 people on the topic of biosecurity at an all-breeds summer field day sponsored in part by the South Carolina Jersey, Holstein and Guernsey associations.

The Satterwhite family, who’ve farmed this land since 1935, are raising a fifth generation to take the reins in the future. Some of that future is already here, starting with a 60-stall rotary milking parlor that milks 360 cows per hour.

Every nine seconds a cow enters the slowly spinning carousel as another completes its milking and steps off. It takes just three minutes to fully milk each cow as the platform revolves a full 360 degrees.

For all the impressive numbers, among the most important functions of the rotary milking parlor is the ease with which handlers can see to the cleanliness of the milking process as each cow enters a stall and is coupled to the milker.

Such extra steps toward biosecurity are a hallmark of the Mid-Atlantic Secure Milk Supply, a 12-state program stretching from South Carolina to Pennsylvania. The program is designed to create processes that will prepare dairy farmers, milk haulers and processors to take extra biosecurity steps that could allow them to continue to move milk safely in the advent of a foot-and-mouth disease outbreak, helping keep them in business and also keep milk on shelves for consumers.

Though a highly contagious disease that infects cattle and other hooved animals, including pigs, sheep, goats and deer, foot-and-mouth disease is not a public health or food safety concern. Nonetheless, the law doesn’t allow infected animals or their byproducts to enter the food chain. An outbreak in the United Kingdom in 2001 caused a crisis in British agriculture. Farmers and agriculture officials are determined to protect American beef and dairy production from a similar situation.

To protect their farm, the Satterwhites have restructured their dairy’s operation using a biosecurity concept called “lines of separation.”

“Lines of separation literally secure potential sources of pathogens away from animals, farm workers or the dairy product,” Parr said. “You don’t want to bring anything on and you don’t want to take anything off without properly addressing potential biological threats.”

Actual lines are drawn — or spray-painted — to divide areas of traffic on the Satterwhite farm. Incoming people, animals, vehicles, equipment and supplies stay outside the production areas of the farm until they have gone through sanitation procedures. The idea is to break what veterinarians call the “chain of infection” in which disease-producing agents use a method of transportation to infect a host.

“The goal is to isolate the unit to keep any infectious disease from entering or leaving the premises,” said Julie Helm, the Clemson LPH poultry specialist veterinarian. “Breaking any part of the chain of infection will reduce the risks to your herd or flock.”

People and their vehicles are a primary mode of transportation for disease-causing pathogens. For this reason, the Satterwhites installed a truck wash at the farm gate. No production vehicles enter the facility without a disinfectant spray.

Human feet get the same kind of treatment. Employees and visitors alike stop at the line of separation to don disposable plastic boots. Before entering the milking parlor, everyone — boot-clad children included — will walk through a disinfectant pan.

“Our feet are easy modes of transportation for pathogens, but they’re also easy to address,” said Charlotte Krugler, a Clemson LPH emergency preparedness veterinarian. “The key is to make biosecurity a habit and a responsibility of everyone on the farm. Many basic biosecurity practices have been around a long time, but they are more important today than ever.”

They’re especially important in an age when diseases can hitch a ride on trucks or airplanes and travel across the country or the globe in a matter of hours.

“From a disease standpoint, you’re trying to make the risk negligible,” Parr told the crowd. “There’s no such thing as no risk.”

For Kevin Satterwhite, the biosecurity procedures are an important part of ensuring that the farm remains safe and productive for future generations.

“My great-grandfather started this farm in 1935,” Satterwhite said. “I look forward to future Satterwhite generations returning to our family farm.”

Biosecurity is for everyone. Dr. Julie Helm of Clemson Livestock-Poultry Health helps secure plastic boots around the shoes of a young visitor to a field day at the Satterwhite Dair Farm in Newberry County.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/web1_cubiosecurity01.jpgBiosecurity is for everyone. Dr. Julie Helm of Clemson Livestock-Poultry Health helps secure plastic boots around the shoes of a young visitor to a field day at the Satterwhite Dair Farm in Newberry County. Photos courtesy of Clemson University
Dairy field day visitors studied the Satterwhite farm’s 60-stall rotary milking parlor, which milks 1,480 cows three times daily.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/web1_cubiosecurity02.jpgDairy field day visitors studied the Satterwhite farm’s 60-stall rotary milking parlor, which milks 1,480 cows three times daily. Photos courtesy of Clemson University
A cow enters the slowly spinning rotary milking parlor very nine seconds as another steps off.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/web1_cubiosecurity03.jpgA cow enters the slowly spinning rotary milking parlor very nine seconds as another steps off. Photos courtesy of Clemson University
Dairy patriarch Wayne Satterwhite (right) describes his farm’s waste management processes during the dairy biosecurity field day.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/web1_cubiosecurity04.jpgDairy patriarch Wayne Satterwhite (right) describes his farm’s waste management processes during the dairy biosecurity field day. Photos courtesy of Clemson University
State Veterinarian Boyd Parr leads visitors at the dairy field day through the operation of a truck wash, which ensures that the undercarriages of all vehicles are cleaned before they enter.
https://www.theeasleyprogress.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/08/web1_cubiosecurity05.jpgState Veterinarian Boyd Parr leads visitors at the dairy field day through the operation of a truck wash, which ensures that the undercarriages of all vehicles are cleaned before they enter. Photos courtesy of Clemson University

By Tom Hallman

For The Sentinel-Progress

Tom Hallman works in Public Service and Agriculture; College of Agriculture, Forestry and Life Sciences, at Clemson University.

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