Title: Media Analysis
1Enhancing Food Safety Culture to Reduce Rates of
Foodborne Illness
Dr. Ben Chapman Food safety extension
specialist Dept of 4-H Youth Dev and FCS North
Carolina State University benjamin_chapman_at_ncsu.ed
u
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4Food safety culture
- The aggregation of the prevailing, relatively
constant, learned, shared attitudes, values and
beliefs contributing to the hygiene behaviors
used within a particular food handling
environment - Griffith (2010)
5Food safety culture
- It is a set of shared attitudes, values and
beliefs around food safety - Production/sources
- Handling/storage
- Preparation
- You can have a good food safety culture or a bad
one
6Impact of actions
Travis Cudney 2010 Champion Child Blind since age
2 Complications from a pathogenic E. coli
infection
7Food safety culture
- Maintaining a food safety culture means
- Operators and staff know the risks associated
with the products or meals they produce - Know why managing the risks is important
- Can effectively manage those risks
- Demonstrable
8Fat Duck norovirus, England, 2009
- Run by celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal
- Voluntarily closed restaurant in Feb. 2009
- Originally said it wasnt food, but an airborne
virus - UK Health Protection Agency reported in Sept.
2009, 529 patrons ill with norovirusin January
and February 2009 - source was likely contaminated shellfish,
including oysters that were served raw
9Fat Duck
- Delayed response to the incident
- Used inappropriate environmental cleaning
productsStaff working when ill - up to 16 of the restaurants food handlers were
reportedly working with norovirus symptoms
before it was voluntarily closed
10Food safety culture
- Yiannas (2009)
- Culture not program
- It is a choice
- Leaders own the program
- Talk about consequences
- Provide consequences
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12Maple Leaf Foods, Canada 2008
- Listeria monocytogenes-contaminated deli meats
caused 57 illnesses and 23 deaths - contamination source was commercial meat slicers
that had meat residue trapped deep inside the
slicing mechanisms - textbook risk communication,lousy risk
management - delay in warning the public
13Maple Leaf Listeria review
- Focus on food safety was insufficient among
senior management at company and government - Insufficient planning for a potential outbreak
- Those involved lacked a sense of urgency at the
outset of the outbreak - Weatherill (2009) specifically identified the
need for cultures of food safety at food
processing companies, calling for actions, not
words
14Cultural factors influencing food safety
performance
Griffith, Livesey Clayton (2010)
- Leadership
- Food safety managementsystems and style
- Commitment to food safety
- Food safety environment
- Risk perception
- Communication
15Maple Leaf try harder
- Provide a chronological accounting of the
outbreak - Warning labels to packages of ready-to-eat meats
for persons at high risk for listeriosis - Testing results?
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17Marketing food safety culture
Retail/ foodservice
Distribution
Consumers
Production
Customer feedback
18Things to concentrate on
- What are the barriers/roadblocks in your firm?
- Provide tools/resources
- Asking questions from vendors about their
practices - have a system to know what the right answers are.
- Share the food safety values are with all staff
- And when you get good at it (or if you already
are), market it
19Food safety culture
- Relatively easy (or should be) to define poor
food safety culture - More difficult to enact a good one
- Griffith Yiannas Powell and Chapman
- More will come
20External and internal
- Demonstrate to their staff and customers that
- they are aware of current food safety issues
- learn from others mistakes
- food safety is important within the organization
21- Dr. Ben Chapman
- benjamin_chapman_at_ncsu.edu
- Follow me on twitter _at_benjaminchapman
- 919 809 3205
- www.foodsafetyinfosheets.com
- www.barfblog.com