Mande Calls For More Rapid, Robust And Reaching Pathogen Testing

In a recent speech, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Food Safety Jerold Mande outlined various areas of research he believes will help improve food safety.

During his remarks, Mande noted that he would like to push for more rapid and effective testing. "We need better sampling methods, along with tests that more rapidly detect a broader range of harmful pathogens," he said. "We also need stronger assurance that laboratories used by companies have the expertise and experience to do effective food safety testing."

In addition, Mande stated that FSIS inspectors should be given more sensitive and effective ways to detect food-borne hazards. Here too, Mande opined that the agency “needs to do a better job equipping our inspectors with the means to not let harmful pathogens slip by as we stand watch."

Next, Mande called for additional research to better identify what he referred to as “those unidentified pathogens” which could potentially be responsible for a majority of food-borne illnesses in the United States. According to the CDC, as many as 80 percent of illnesses, 70 percent of hospitalizations and 65 percent of deaths could be caused by agents other than the 30 pathogens CDC currently tracks.

Finally, Mande also suggested, and rightfully so, that additional research was needed to give farmers and ranchers better tools in order to fight food-borne pathogens. "To take the next big step forward on food safety we need to do more to have fewer pathogens on food animals when they arrive at the slaughterhouse gate," he concluded.

Vilsack Names Jerold Mande As Deputy Under Secretary For Food Safety

Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack has announced the appointment of Jerold R. Mande, M.P.H., as Deputy Under Secretary for Food Safety at the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). In this position, Mande will have responsibility for the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS), the USDA agency which protects public health through food safety and defense by ensuring that the nation's supply of meat, poultry and processed egg products are safe and wholesome.

According to Vilsack, "Jerold Mande brings years of experience in health, nutrition and epidemiology, food safety, and public policy in both government and academia that will greatly serve USDA and the public as we continue to work to protect public health."

Most recently, as Associate Director for Public Policy at the Yale Cancer Center, Yale University School of Medicine, Mande developed a national model to increase support for cancer prevention and control, including diet, exercise, and obesity. He also initiated and helped manage the cancer center disparities program, to improve cancer control and care in underserved populations. He was also a lecturer in public health, and helped train select groups of physicians for careers in public policy.

Prior to this, Mande served on the White House staff as a health policy adviser where he helped lead key food safety, tobacco control and cancer initiatives, including expansion of FoodNet and PulseNet. He was Deputy Assistant Secretary for Occupational Health at the U.S, Department of Labor. He also served as Senior Advisor and Executive Assistant to the Commissioner of the Food and Drug and Administration, where he led design of the Nutrition Facts food label, for which he received the Presidential Award for Design Excellence. Mande began his distinguished career in the U.S. Congress where he was first hired to work on food safety legislation.

Mande holds a Masters Degree in Public Health (M.P.H. Nutrition and Epidemiology) from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Bachelor of Science Degree, magna cum laude (B.S. with Distinction in Nutritional Sciences) from the University of Connecticut at Storrs. He also attended the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, completing a Program for Senior Managers in Government.