• Title/Summary/Keyword: livestock products

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Analysis of the Housewives' Awareness and Demands on Livestock Products HACCP System (주부 대상의 축산물 HACCP 인지도 및 요구도 분석)

  • Beak, Jin-Kyung
    • Journal of the FoodService Safety
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    • v.2 no.1
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    • pp.10-21
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    • 2021
  • According to the analysis which investigated visitors of HACCP system certified stores and non-visitors of such stores on the awareness of HACCP for livestock products, 77.1% (246 pollees) heard of HACCP certification for livestock products, 67.1% (214 pollees) had seen the HACCP certification mark for livestock products, 62.1% (198 pollees) heard of HACCP certification for livestock products in meet retail shops, and 51.4% (164 pollees) were not aware of the recent TV · subway advertisements regarding HACCP certification for livestock products. For every questionnaire on the awareness of HACCP for livestock products, visitors of HACCP system certified stores showed significantly higher response rate than nonvisitors (p<0.01, p<0.001). The majority of pollees (74.9%, 239 pollees) replied that the word HACCP for livestock products brings up the image of safe livestock products, and 37.0% answered that the term HACCP defines 'Hazard analysis critical control point'. Regarding the questions on HACCP system for livestock products, 38.6% showed that they were most curious in terms of the benefits of such system. The demand analysis on HACCP for livestock products for consumer was also conducted. In the analysis, the demand for support of the policy (4.06 points) was higher than demand for education · public promotion of HACCP (4.03 points) and demand for related application (3.90 points).

Korean Labelling Standard of Milk Products (우리나라 유가공식품의 표시기준)

  • Lee, Young-Hee;Namkung, Jong-Hwan;Jeong, Byung-Gon;Hwang, In-Jin;Lee, Hong-Seup
    • Journal of Dairy Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.25 no.1
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    • pp.37-45
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    • 2007
  • Food labelling is the primary means of communication between the producer and purchaser and plays an important role in consumer's choice of food. Food labelling applying to livestock products, such as meat products (ham, sausage etc.), milk products(milk, fermented milk, butter and cheese etc.) and egg Products is regulated by 'Livestock Products Labelling Standard', National Veterinary Research & Quarantine Service (NVRQS) Notification. This study presents the principles of Korean milk products labelling provision and its recent revision to prevent consumer from misunderstanding and facilitate fair trade practices in market and also keep consistencies with international and relative national regulations. This study also suggests milk products labelling policy direction in the future.

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Proposal of unification plan based on differences between food and livestock product HACCP (식품과 축산물 HACCP의 차이점 분석 및 일원화 방안 도출)

  • Jo, Ah-Hyeon;Kang, Ju-Yeong;Park, Eun-Ji;Lee, Han-Cheol;Lee, Cheol-Soo;Kim, Jung-Beom
    • Food Science and Industry
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    • v.53 no.1
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    • pp.101-115
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    • 2020
  • Korea has been managed HACCP with food and livestock products separately, but it was incorporated into food and livestock product safety management certification standard in 2015. Currently, the notification is unified, but food sanitation act and the livestock products sanitary control act are not unified. These differences are leading to complaints from food and livestock corporation. In this review, the food sanitation act, enforcement regulations of the food sanitation act, the livestock products sanitary control act and enforcement regulations of the livestock products sanitary control act were compared and analyzed to identify the part which requires unification. As a result of the survey, the thirteen clauses were proposed to unify in the food sanitation act and the livestock products sanitary control act. The nineteen clauses were proposed to unify in enforcement regulations of the food sanitation act and enforcement regulations of the livestock products sanitary control act.

A Study on the Health Benefits Labeling for Livestock Products (축산물의 유용성 표시에 대한 고찰)

  • Jang, Ae-Ra;Chae, Hyun-Seok;Yoo, Young-Mo;Ham, Jun-Sang;Jeong, Seok-Geun;Lee, Seung-Gyu;Ahn, Chong-Nam;Kim, Dong-Hoon;Lee, Sung-Ki;Lee, Eui-Soo
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.29 no.5
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    • pp.599-611
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    • 2009
  • This article concerns the labeling guideline for health benefits of livestock products. In recent years, livestock products with health benefits have emerged as a key market for livestock product industries. However, the current labeling regulation for functional foods severely prohibits livestock product industries from attaching most of the health benefits claims to the products. Also, manufacturers have some difficulties in labeling the health benefits of certain livestock products because of a lack of guidelines on health benefit claims for livestock products. Therefore, some livestock product industries and scientists have strongly demanded a revision of labeling regulation, Appended Chart No. 14 provided by Article 52 (2) of Enforcement Regulation of the Processing of Livestock Products Act, so they could mark the health benefits on their products. To support the 'revision of labeling regulation', the goals of this article were as follows; 1) to assess the current situation on nutrition labeling and nutrition claims on foods, 2) to determine the current situation on health claim regulatory systems used in foreign countries (CODEX, USA, Japan, EU, and Australia/New Zealand), 3) to assess the current situation on the health claim or health benefit claim regulations for functional foods, conventional foods, and livestock products in Korea, and 4) to determine the need for complement in health benefit claim for livestock products. In conclusion, guidelines for the use of health benefit claims on livestock products should be prepared as soon as possible and the guidelines should be viable and easy for manufacturers and control authorities to understand. Also, nutrient profiles should be developed to identify whether the livestock products are eligible to bear health benefit claims and to help consumers make the right choices.

Overview of the Management Characteristics of Food (Livestock Products) Transportation Systems on International- and National-level HACCP Application (HACCP 적용을 중심으로 본 해외 식품운반 관리체계의 특징과 우리나라 축산물 유통단계 안전관리 현황 조사 연구)

  • Kim, Hyoun-Wook;Paik, Hyun-Dong;Hong, Whan-Soo;Lee, Joo-Yeon
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.513-522
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    • 2009
  • HACCP is a scientific and systematic program that identifies specific hazards and gives measures for their control to ensure the safety of foods. Based on the Livestock Products Processing Act, the HACCP system is now being applied to Korean livestock products since December 1997, and Korea is accelerating its application from farm to table, including in farms, slaughterhouses, livestock product industries, retail markets, and transportation. The transport of livestock and its products is one of the vulnerable sectors in terms of food safety in Korea. Meats are transported in trucks in the form of carcasses or packaged meats in boxes. Carcasses may be exposed to microbiological, physical, and chemical hazards from the environment or through cross-contamination from other meats. Poor cleaning or maintenance of vehicles and tools may also raise the exposure of carcasses to microbiological or chemical hazards. HACCP application and its acceleration in distribution, particularly in transport, is regarded as critical to the provision to consumers of ultimately safe livestock products. To achieve this goal, steady efforts to develop practical tools for HACCP application should be carried out.

Case Studies of Organic Livestock Farming in Europe and Strategies for Development of Organic Livestock Farming in Korea (유럽의 유기축산 사례 및 우리나라 유기축산의 발전 방안)

  • An, Jong-Ho;Jo, Ik-Hwan;Lee, Ju-Sam
    • Korean Journal of Organic Agriculture
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.75-92
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    • 2003
  • Organic livestock farming in northern European regions has been expanded with the major animals of large ruminants using pastures and grass silages. Organic livestock farming in some European countries has been in rather short of productivity compared to the conventional livestock farming, however since the gap of productivity between organic and conventional livestock farming has been reported to be reduced when the efficiency of management would improve, organic livestock farming has a potential to develop as a clean livestock farming in the future. We expect that organic livestock farming be propelled to a future model of livestock farming in Korea too. As the schemes for realization of organic livestock farming in Korea, firstly a system for the consistent supply of organic feed should be established. Mountainous areas that represents 63 % of total area of Korea could be utilized for the production of organic forages. Uncultivated rice paddy and upland agricultural field could also be used for this purpose. The active application of organic agricultural by-products such as organic rice straw, organic rice bran and SO forth can be considered for organic livestock farming. Secondly, the replacement of anti-biotics for the management of animal diseases should be developed using natural products. Plants and microbes would be good sources of natural products. Thirdly, the realization of organic livestock farming may require a system for certification of the organic farms and consequently the experts to work on.

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Strengthening of Veterinary Services for Safety and Quality Control of the Livestock Products as Food in the Market Internationalization Era (국제관방화 시대에 있어서 축산식품의 안전성 및 품질에 대한 수의학적 관리강화 방안)

  • 박근식;박종명;조준형
    • Korean Journal of Poultry Science
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.121-135
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    • 1991
  • Facing the international open-trade of agricultural and livestock products, a basic strategy is urgently necessary to improve the domestic livestock industry to an international level. Price and quality competitions are the most important target in international trade. Improvement in productivity of livestock is the most important factor in price competition. In recent trade of livestock products, quality competition becomes more important than price competition in livestock products, and will be severer in the future. Basic strategies for higher productivity and safety of livestock products are listed as follows : 1. Protection from exotic diseases 2. Eradication of indigenous diseases 3. Development of new methods and techniques for control of animal diseases 4. Application of hygiene and management techniques 5. Safety evaluation of feedstuffs and animal drugs, and 6. Development of technique and regulations for prevention and monitoring of residue of harmful chemicals.

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Screening of Conjugated Linoleic Acid Producing Lactic Acid Bacteria from Fecal Samples of Healthy Babies

  • Ham, J.S.;In, Y.M.;Jeong, S.G.;Kim, J.G.;Lee, E.H.;Kim, H.S.;Yoon, S.K.;Lee, B.H.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.15 no.7
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    • pp.1031-1035
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    • 2002
  • This study was carried out to obtain conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) producing lactic acid bacteria for further study on the enzymes related to the production of CLA which has gained considerable attention and on the development as a probiotic culture. Total 34 lactic acid bacteria were isolated from 19 feces samples of healthy babies. CLA forming ability was measured spectrophotometrically by the modification of linoleate 12-cis, 11-trans-isomerase activity measuring method, and CLA of the cultures were extracted, methylated, and examined by HPLC analysis. CLA methyl ester of only one culture showing the highest value of CLA forming ability could be detected by HPLC analysis. The culture was found to be Gram positive, rods and catalase negative. It grows at $45^{\circ}C$ but not at $15^{\circ}C$, and was identified to be Lactobacillus fermentum on the basis of the biochemical characteristics and the utilization of substrates. These results provide an efficient experimental method to screen CLA producing lactic acid bacteria.

Production of Angiotensin-I Converting Enzyme Inhibitory Hydrolysates from Egg Albumen

  • Kim, H.S.;Ham, J.S.;Jeong, S.G.;Yoo, Y.M.;Chae, H.S.;Ahn, C.N.;Lee, J.M.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.16 no.9
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    • pp.1369-1373
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    • 2003
  • ACE (Angiotensin-I converting enzyme) inhibitory peptides derived from foods are thought to suppress high blood pressure by inhibiting ACE. We tried to make efficient production of the ACE inhibitory hydrolysate from egg albumen. A hydrolysate digested by neutrase presented the highest ACE inhibitory activity ($IC_50\;value=256.35{\mu}g/ml$) and the proper proteolysis was occurred by 1.0% enzyme addition and 4 h incubation at $47^{\circ}C$. Antihypertensive effect of neutrase hydrolysate was investigated in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR, n=5). Systolic blood pressure (SBP) was decrease by 6.88% (-14.14 mmHg, p<0.05) at 3 h after oral administration of 300 mg/kg body weight, and by 13.33% (-27.72 mmHg, p<0.05) by emulsified hydrolysate. These results showed that it is very effective to utilize egg albumen as a protein source for the production of ACE inhibitory peptides. However, further studies are required to investigate the methods to increase recovery yield and the isolation of active peptide is necessary for determining its sequence responsible for ACE inhibitory activity.

Effects of HACCP System Implementation on Medicine Use and Productivity of Swine Farms in Korea

  • Cho, Jea-Jin;Baek, Seung-Hee;Lim, Dong-Gyun;Pyo, Su-Il;Lee, Won-Cheol;Nam, In-Sik
    • Food Science of Animal Resources
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    • v.30 no.3
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    • pp.392-396
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    • 2010
  • This study was conducted to examine the effect of HACCP implementation on the cost of medicine use, antibiotic utilization, and productivity of swine in Korea. Data were collected from forty-five swine farms before and after implementation of a HACCP system. The cost of medicine used, the number of different antibiotics used and the number of feeds containing antibiotic supplements added at the feed company tended to be lower (p>0.05) after HACCP implementation. Additionally, the number of feeds containing antibiotics supplemented at the farm was significantly lower after HACCP implementation (p<0.05). Moreover, the number of piglets born per sow per year and pigs marketed per sow per year were higher after HACCP implementation (22.0, 20.0) than before HACCP implementation (20.4, 18.9). These results suggest that implementation of HACCP systems on swine farms may provide beneficial effects such as reduction of medical expenses and improved productivity, as well as increased safety of livestock products for consumers.