06/18/2026 | News release | Distributed by Public on 06/18/2026 14:56
The Swine Health advisory committee is focused on turning strategy into action. To help advance the National Swine Health Strategy, the committee identified five focus areas that will drive action and measurable progress for U.S. pork producers.
Pork producers need a swine health strategy that actually works on the farm. The Swine Health advisory committee was created to make sure that happens.
For the inaugural meeting in May, the advisory committee's twenty-seven producers, veterinarians, USDA staff and packers/processors met in Des Moines and left with a clear direction: build on what's working and accelerate action. The National Swine Health Strategy (NSHS) only succeeds if it reflects producers' needs, and the advisory committee is responsible for ensuring it delivers.
The advisory committee identified five focus areas to drive measurable progress in swine health.
NPB's swine health team is prioritizing PEDV as a first step in disease elimination efforts. Why start with PEDV? The framework is already well developed, creating an opportunity for the industry to achieve meaningful progress faster.
Additionally, the work, data, and lessons gained through this focus on PEDV will help inform future PRRSV elimination efforts and support better strategies to reduce disease spread across the U.S. swine industry.
The May meeting brought candid conversation, strong engagement, and a clear sense of urgency.
"The discussion reinforced both the urgency of improving swine health and the opportunity we have to make meaningful progress for U.S. pork producers. The direction is clear and our focus now is turning that direction into action."
Paul Ayers, Swine Health advisory committee chairmanConversations centered on aligning around shared goals for the NSHS and recognizing that broad industry endorsement will ultimately determine its success. Over the course of the year, the committee is responsible for identifying what's working, where gaps remain, and where the industry should focus next.
"I'm excited to work alongside this group of engaged producers who are stepping up to share their time and expertise to strengthen swine health across the industry," said Dr. Dusty Oedekoven, NPB Chief Veterinarian.
Swine health is not a talking point; it's producers' bottom line.
Progress starts on the farm, but lasting change only happens when the entire industry moves together. The Pork Checkoff is committed to giving you the research, tools and support to make that happen.
The committee has set the direction. Now the work shifts to execution. Over the next 90 days, the NPB swine health team is committed to delivering meaningful progress on these focus areas.