
From protocols to people, the next phase of biosecurity is about execution, culture, and accountability
Presented by Suidae Biosecurity Services
March 2026 | Swine Web Industry Perspectives
For years, the swine industry has invested heavily in biosecurity—protocols, infrastructure, training, and compliance.
And yet, disease challenges persist.
Not because biosecurity isn’t working—but because it’s being tested in ways it hasn’t been before.
The Illusion of “Being Biosecure”
Most operations today would consider themselves biosecure. They have entry protocols, signage, downtime rules, and sanitation procedures in place.
But recent disease pressure—whether PRRS, PED, or the looming threat of foreign animal diseases—has exposed a critical gap:
Having a plan is not the same as executing it consistently.
In many cases, breakdowns aren’t happening in the design of systems—they’re happening in the day-to-day realities of:
- Human behavior
- Process drift over time
- Inconsistent enforcement
- Gaps between facilities and actual workflows
Biosecurity Is a System—Not a Checklist
The industry is beginning to shift its thinking.
Instead of viewing biosecurity as a checklist, leading producers are starting to treat it as a living system—one that requires continuous evaluation and refinement.
That includes two critical components:
- Facilities – layout, access points, traffic flow, sanitation design
- Processes – how people actually move, behave, and make decisions on farm
If those two aren’t aligned, risk increases—regardless of how strong the written protocol is.
This is where a growing number of producers are bringing in outside perspectives to evaluate whether systems are truly working as intended.
Where the Real Risk Lives: The Human Layer
One of the biggest realizations across the industry is that biosecurity failures are rarely technical—they’re behavioral.
Protocols don’t fail on paper. They fail when:
- Shortcuts are taken
- Communication breaks down
- Training isn’t reinforced
- Accountability is unclear
That’s why more operations are investing in culture-building, not just compliance.
Because the most effective biosecurity programs today are the ones where:
- Everyone understands why it matters
- Expectations are consistent
- Ownership is shared across the team
The Rise of Auditing and Continuous Evaluation
Another shift gaining momentum is the move toward structured auditing and routine assessment.
Not as a one-time exercise—but as an ongoing process to answer a simple question:
“Is what we think is happening… actually happening?”
Across the industry, this has led to increased focus on:
- Facility and process audits across production stages
- Evaluation of traffic patterns and sanitation flow
- Feed mill and transportation risk points
- Ongoing reporting and accountability systems
Approaches like those used by Suidae Biosecurity Services reflect this shift—combining facility evaluation with process accountability and ongoing follow-up rather than one-time recommendations.
What’s becoming clear is that visibility drives improvement—and without it, even strong systems can erode over time.
Preparedness Is the New Standard
With the continued threat of foreign animal diseases, the conversation is also shifting from prevention alone to preparedness.
Producers are asking:
- If something happens, are we ready?
- Can we maintain movement and continuity?
- Do we have systems that stand up under stress?
Industry frameworks and certification programs are becoming part of this evolution, but the real work happens in how those systems are applied at the farm level.
A More Honest Look at Biosecurity
The industry isn’t failing at biosecurity—it’s maturing.
And with that maturity comes a more honest understanding:
- Biosecurity is not static
- It requires constant reinforcement
- It is only as strong as its weakest moment—not its best plan
The Role of Industry Partners
As this shift continues, the role of specialized biosecurity partners is evolving as well.
Rather than simply providing protocols, groups like Suidae Biosecurity Services are helping producers:
- Evaluate real-world execution of biosecurity systems
- Build stronger on-farm culture and accountability
- Develop tailored, operation-specific strategies
- Stay prepared for both everyday challenges and high-impact disease events
It’s a reflection of where the industry is heading—from static plans to dynamic systems that are continuously tested, refined, and improved.
Bottom Line:
The next phase of biosecurity isn’t about adding more rules—it’s about building systems that actually work in the real world, every day, under pressure.
Contact & Learn More
Suidae Biosecurity Services
📍 2111 100 Ave., Algona, IA
📞 515-295-8777
james_inn@suidaehp.com





