Assessment of hygiene practices and microbial safety of milk supplied by smallholder farmers to processors in selected counties in Kenya

Abstract
Smallholder farmers dominate the Kenyan dairy sector producing 95% of the total milk. However, several concerns have been raised on the quality and safety of the milk they produce. This study assessed the hygienic practices and microbial safety of milk supplied by smallholder farmers to processors in Bomet, Nyeri, and Nakuru counties in Kenya. Interviews and direct observations were carried out to assess hygiene and handling practices by farmers and a total of 92 milk samples were collected
along four collection channels: direct suppliers, traders, cooperatives with coolers, and cooperatives without coolers.
Microbial analysis was done following standard procedures and data analysed using GenStat and SPSS. This study revealed that farmers did not employ good hygienic practices in their routine dairy management. They used plastic containers for
milking and milk storage (34.2%); they did not clean sheds (47.9%) and did not set aside cows that suffered from mastitis factors (83.6%), resulting in poor microbial quality of raw milk along the collection channels. The highest mean total viable
counts (8.72 log10 cfu/ml) were recorded in Nakuru while Nyeri had the highest mean E. coli counts (4.97 log10 cfu/ml) and Bomet recorded the highest mean counts of 5.13 and 5.78 log10 cfu/ml for Staphylococcus aureus and Listeria monocytogenes
respectively. Based on all above-mentioned parameters, the microbial load in most samples from all three counties exceeded the set Kenyan standards. Farmer training, improving road infrastructure, use of instant coolers at cooperatives, and quality-based payment systems are recommended as measures to curb microbial growth.


Keywords Collection channels · E. coli · Hygiene · Kenya · Milk quality · TVC · Staphylococcus

Author

Miriam W. Mogotu1 · George O. Abong1 · John Mburu2 · Oghaiki Asaah Ndambi3

 

1 Department of Food Science Nutrition and Technology,
University of Nairobi, P.O. Box 29053 – 00625, Kangemi,
Kenya
2 Department of Agricultural Economics, University
of Nairobi, P.O. Box 29053 ‑ 00625, Kangemi, Kenya
3 Animal Science Group, Wageningen University & Research,
P.O. Box 338, 6700 AB Wageningen, Netherlands