Food safety culture – why all the fuss?
Access status:
Open Access
Type
OtherAuthor/s
Frankish, ElizabethRoss, Tom
Bowman, John
Luning, Pieternel
Mahoney, Deon
Oladele, Bisi
McAlpine, Graham
Abstract
The global burden of foodborne disease where one in 10 people suffer a foodborne illness annually warrants improved efficacy of food safety management systems (FSMSs) through supply chains. The main contributors to foodborne illness identified by the World Health Organisation - ...
See moreThe global burden of foodborne disease where one in 10 people suffer a foodborne illness annually warrants improved efficacy of food safety management systems (FSMSs) through supply chains. The main contributors to foodborne illness identified by the World Health Organisation - poor hygiene and sanitation by food handlers, contaminated equipment, temperature abuse, and food from an unsafe source - are factors influenced directly or indirectly by food handler behaviour. Why is it that companies with seemingly advanced FSMSs still sometimes cause outbreaks? Evidence is building that improving food safety (FS)-culture contributes not only to better food safety outcomes but also reduces the cost of food safety control.
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See moreThe global burden of foodborne disease where one in 10 people suffer a foodborne illness annually warrants improved efficacy of food safety management systems (FSMSs) through supply chains. The main contributors to foodborne illness identified by the World Health Organisation - poor hygiene and sanitation by food handlers, contaminated equipment, temperature abuse, and food from an unsafe source - are factors influenced directly or indirectly by food handler behaviour. Why is it that companies with seemingly advanced FSMSs still sometimes cause outbreaks? Evidence is building that improving food safety (FS)-culture contributes not only to better food safety outcomes but also reduces the cost of food safety control.
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Date
2021Source title
Food AustraliaVolume
73Issue
1Publisher
Australian Institute of Food Science and TechnologyFunding information
ARC IC160100025Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0Faculty/School
Faculty of Science, School of Life and Environmental SciencesFaculty of Science, Sydney Institute of Agriculture (SIA)
Department, Discipline or Centre
ARC Centre for Food Safety in the Fresh Produce IndustryShare