The effectiveness of current antimicrobial interventions used in reducing the prevalence or load of Escherichia coli O157 and indicator organisms on cattle hides and carcasses at two commercial beef processing plants was evaluated. Sponge sampling of beef cattle was performed at ve locations from the initial entry of the animals to the slaughter oor to the exit of carcasses from the ''hotbox'' cooler. For each sample, E. coli O157 prevalence was determined and total aerobic bacteria, Enterobacteriaceae, and E. coli O157 were enumerated. E. coli O157 was found on 76% of animal hides coming into the plants, but no carcasses leaving the cooler were identi ed as contaminated with E. coli O157. A positive relationship was seen between the incidence of E. coli O157 in hide samples and that in preevisceration samples. Aerobic plate counts and Enterobacteriaceae counts averaged 7.8 and 6.2 log CFU/100 cm 2 , respectively, on hides, and 1.4 and 0.4 log CFU/100 cm 2 , respectively, on chilled carcasses. Aerobic plate counts and Enterobacteriaceae counts on preevisceration carcasses were signi cantly related to the respective levels on the corresponding hides; the carcasses of animals whose hides carried higher numbers of bacteria were more likely to carry higher numbers of bacteria. Implementation of the sampling protocol described here would allow processors to evaluate the ef cacy of on-line antimicrobial interventions and allow industrywide benchmarking of hygienic practices.Escherichia coli O157:H7 has been a pathogen of concern to the meat processing industry for two decades. Cases of hemorrhagic colitis caused by E. coli O157:H7 were associated with consumption of undercooked ground beef in the early 1980s (26). In the United States during 1992 and 1993, an outbreak of E. coli O157:H7 infection associated with consumption of ground beef caused hundreds of illnesses and four deaths (31). These events led the Food Safety and Inspection Service (FSIS) to declare the E. coli O157:H7 organism an adulterant in ground beef and to require that meat processors establish hazard analysis and critical control point (HACCP) plans for their plants (12). Since this time, numerous intervention strategies focusing on prevention of carcass contamination and decontamination of carcasses have been designed, tested, and put into practice at commercial processing plants.Recent studies have demonstrated that combinations of antimicrobial interventions are more effective at reducing * Author for correspondence. Tel: 402-762-4227; Fax: 402-762-4149; E-mail: arthur@email.marc.usda.gov. † Names are necessary to report factually on available data; however, the U.S. Department of Agriculture neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product, and the use of the name by the U.S. Department of Agriculture implies no approval of the product to the exclusion of others that may also be suitable. ‡ Present address: Room 119, Veterinary Diagnostic Center, East Campus, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68583-0907, USA.surface contami...