The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition

Our review explores the changing food production, distribution and consumption environment in low and middle-income countries and emerging economies as a basis for framing how to study food systems in order to address public health issues of food safety and nutrition. It presents the state of knowle...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Alarcón, P., Domínguez-Salas, Paula, Fèvre, Eric M., Rushton, Jonathan
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113360
_version_ 1855519834121437184
author Alarcón, P.
Domínguez-Salas, Paula
Fèvre, Eric M.
Rushton, Jonathan
author_browse Alarcón, P.
Domínguez-Salas, Paula
Fèvre, Eric M.
Rushton, Jonathan
author_facet Alarcón, P.
Domínguez-Salas, Paula
Fèvre, Eric M.
Rushton, Jonathan
author_sort Alarcón, P.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Our review explores the changing food production, distribution and consumption environment in low and middle-income countries and emerging economies as a basis for framing how to study food systems in order to address public health issues of food safety and nutrition. It presents the state of knowledge on existing food systems science and its use in terms of sustainable actions for food safety and public health. The review identifies a knowledge gap in food system mapping and governance, with value chain mapping of key commodities often missing. Despite a number of initiatives, the application of food systems methods is highly variable in scope and quality. Most analyses concentrate on specific commodities, rarely taking into account the need for a whole diet approach when looking at nutrition or the assessment of a range of infectious agents and their interactions when looking at food safety. Of the studies included in the review there is a growing observation of “informal” food systems, a term used inconsistently and one that requires revision. “Informal” food systems link to the formal sector to provide food security, yet with trade-offs between economic efficiencies and food safety. Efforts to improve food safety are hampered by inadequate food safety capacities and a lack of policy coherence leading to: inadequate investment; fragmented food quality control systems; weak or non-existent traceability mechanisms; weak foodborne disease surveillance; obsolete food regulation; and weak regulatory enforcement. In-depth food systems assessments can complement risk analysis to identify risky behaviors and understand institutional settings in order to improve codes of practice and enforcement. Methods for looking at food safety from a food systems perspective are emerging, yet existing nutrition and food systems science are not advancing sufficiently in response to nutritional public health problems. There is an urgency for improved understanding of the structure and drivers of the food systems, for better planning of changes that leads to nutrients access and healthy levels of eating. It is proposed that countries and international institutions provide an atlas of food system maps for the key commodities based on an agreed common methodology and developed by multidisciplinary teams.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace113360
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
publishDateSort 2021
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1133602025-08-15T13:21:28Z The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition Alarcón, P. Domínguez-Salas, Paula Fèvre, Eric M. Rushton, Jonathan food security food systems food safety nutrition health disease control horticulture ecology food science Our review explores the changing food production, distribution and consumption environment in low and middle-income countries and emerging economies as a basis for framing how to study food systems in order to address public health issues of food safety and nutrition. It presents the state of knowledge on existing food systems science and its use in terms of sustainable actions for food safety and public health. The review identifies a knowledge gap in food system mapping and governance, with value chain mapping of key commodities often missing. Despite a number of initiatives, the application of food systems methods is highly variable in scope and quality. Most analyses concentrate on specific commodities, rarely taking into account the need for a whole diet approach when looking at nutrition or the assessment of a range of infectious agents and their interactions when looking at food safety. Of the studies included in the review there is a growing observation of “informal” food systems, a term used inconsistently and one that requires revision. “Informal” food systems link to the formal sector to provide food security, yet with trade-offs between economic efficiencies and food safety. Efforts to improve food safety are hampered by inadequate food safety capacities and a lack of policy coherence leading to: inadequate investment; fragmented food quality control systems; weak or non-existent traceability mechanisms; weak foodborne disease surveillance; obsolete food regulation; and weak regulatory enforcement. In-depth food systems assessments can complement risk analysis to identify risky behaviors and understand institutional settings in order to improve codes of practice and enforcement. Methods for looking at food safety from a food systems perspective are emerging, yet existing nutrition and food systems science are not advancing sufficiently in response to nutritional public health problems. There is an urgency for improved understanding of the structure and drivers of the food systems, for better planning of changes that leads to nutrients access and healthy levels of eating. It is proposed that countries and international institutions provide an atlas of food system maps for the key commodities based on an agreed common methodology and developed by multidisciplinary teams. 2021-04-14 2021-04-15T06:46:40Z 2021-04-15T06:46:40Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113360 en Open Access Frontiers Media Alarcon, P., Dominguez-Salas, P., Fèvre, E.M. and Rushton J. 2021. The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition. Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems 5: 642635.
spellingShingle food security
food systems
food safety
nutrition
health
disease control
horticulture
ecology
food science
Alarcón, P.
Domínguez-Salas, Paula
Fèvre, Eric M.
Rushton, Jonathan
The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title_full The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title_fullStr The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title_full_unstemmed The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title_short The importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies: A review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
title_sort importance of a food systems approach to low and middle income countries and emerging economies a review of theories and its relevance for disease control and malnutrition
topic food security
food systems
food safety
nutrition
health
disease control
horticulture
ecology
food science
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/113360
work_keys_str_mv AT alarconp theimportanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT dominguezsalaspaula theimportanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT fevreericm theimportanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT rushtonjonathan theimportanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT alarconp importanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT dominguezsalaspaula importanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT fevreericm importanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition
AT rushtonjonathan importanceofafoodsystemsapproachtolowandmiddleincomecountriesandemergingeconomiesareviewoftheoriesanditsrelevancefordiseasecontrolandmalnutrition