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But throughout these events, food processors continued to produce our food. The production of safe food also includes testing. This focus on the safety of our food will, of course, continue, so we wanted to find out more about processors’ plans for their food safety testing in 2021.
Our survey included 200 processors in the United States, Canada, and around the world, and what we heard loud and clear was that testing—and especially environmental monitoring—will continue to grow rapidly.
FIGURE 1. In the next 12 months, by approximately how much will the number of your microbiological tests change?
A drive for continuous improvement in their food safety programs and economic growth with accompanying demand for more products are the main drivers of this growth in testing.
Many companies reported that they will be conducting a greater number of tests due to their plans to improve their environmental monitoring programs. While demand for data from regulators and customers will always keep upward pressure on environmental monitoring test volume, nearly one-half of respondents reported that their own internal goals for continuous improvement in their environmental monitoring programs are the larger reason for their sample growth (Figure 2). This will be seen especially in increases in investigative projects to find the root cause of contamination problems and eliminate harborage organisms. “We have added staff to do the collection, testing, and analysis of results, and this will allow us to do more investigative swabs,” said one producer of ready-to-eat meals. “We will be doing much more swabbing to create base data for our program,” reported a QA manager from a baking company.
FIGURE 2. During the previous 12 months, what motivated changes in your environmental monitoring program?
Companies that produce the diagnostic tests and products that support this testing will certainly be the beneficiaries of this growth. But it also seems that food safety laboratories will greatly benefit as most of the companies in our survey also report that they are planning to increase their outsourcing of samples—especially if the analysis is for food pathogens (Figure 3).
As we have seen in the past, processors are far more comfortable working with nonpathogenic indicator organisms in their in-plant lab than they are analyzing pathogens. In this sample-weighted data, 71 percent of the indicator organisms collected were analyzed in an in-plant lab, while a near mirror-image 75 percent of pathogen samples were outsourced to a commercial laboratory. This figure of 75 percent is larger than we have seen in past surveys, with pathogen outsourcing levels typically reported in a range of 50–60 percent. This is not surprising, however, as this trend toward outsourcing pathogen analysis has been pronounced and growing in the past 3–5 years. What may be surprising to some is the 26 percent of nonpathogen tests in this sample that will also be sent to outside laboratories. This is a category where we have typically seen outsourcing levels in a range of 15–20 percent. While this may be specific to this survey data set, we believe it indicates a phenomenon that we call “sample dragging,” or to put it very simply, if processors are going to send most of their pathogen samples to outside labs, it becomes easier to just send more of the others too.
FIGURE 3. Where are your microbiology samples analyzed?
“A drive for continuous improvement in their food safety programs and economic growth with accompanying demand for more products are the main drivers of this growth in testing.”


Bob Ferguson is president of Strategic Consulting Inc. and can be reached at
bobferguson9806@gmail.com or on Twitter at @SCI_Ferguson.