Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives

Global food safety systems are rapidly changing in response to urbanization and population growth, climate change, trade expansion and social and economic changes; Africa is no exception. The continent is the second in the world after Asia in terms of area and population. The rapidly evolving food s...

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Main Authors: Amenu, K., Alonso, Silvia, Mutua, Florence K., Roesel, Kristina, Lindahl, Johanna F., Kowalcyk, B., Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D., Grace, Delia
Format: Ponencia
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119275
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author Amenu, K.
Alonso, Silvia
Mutua, Florence K.
Roesel, Kristina
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Kowalcyk, B.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Grace, Delia
author_browse Alonso, Silvia
Amenu, K.
Grace, Delia
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Kowalcyk, B.
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Mutua, Florence K.
Roesel, Kristina
author_facet Amenu, K.
Alonso, Silvia
Mutua, Florence K.
Roesel, Kristina
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Kowalcyk, B.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Grace, Delia
author_sort Amenu, K.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Global food safety systems are rapidly changing in response to urbanization and population growth, climate change, trade expansion and social and economic changes; Africa is no exception. The continent is the second in the world after Asia in terms of area and population. The rapidly evolving food systems in Africa pose important food safety challenges. Food processing approaches, traditionally practiced by African societies can be used to effectively to reduce food safety risks (e.g., fermentation when done at small-scale). However, mass production and long-distance transport of foods, which are now common practice, bring new food safety challenges. Food safety along the production to consumption continuum is characterized in the majority of the cases by the involvement of informal actors with sub-optimal food handling practices, creating major impacts on public health and the economy. Generally, the current complexity of food systems makes solutions not always straight forward. Globally, unsafe food causes an estimated 600 million illnesses, and 420,000 deaths and Africa disproportionately bears the highest burden of foodborne diseases. With few exceptions, the issue of food safety has not been given comparable emphasis on the continent and, when it has, the focus is largely on food commodities destined for international market. This presentation covers the major foodborne hazards (microbiological and chemical) in the African context and describes local and continental examples of food safety initiatives aimed at reducing the burden of foodborne disease and improving public health. Specifically, the application of risk-based and One Health approaches to reduce foodborne diseases will be emphasised. Examples of action research and political decision making around food safety at the continental level will be provided. Coordinated and tailored efforts that take into account the complex nature of global and African food safety systems are clearly needed.
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spelling CGSpace1192752025-01-06T09:43:39Z Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives Amenu, K. Alonso, Silvia Mutua, Florence K. Roesel, Kristina Lindahl, Johanna F. Kowalcyk, B. Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D. Grace, Delia food safety policies Global food safety systems are rapidly changing in response to urbanization and population growth, climate change, trade expansion and social and economic changes; Africa is no exception. The continent is the second in the world after Asia in terms of area and population. The rapidly evolving food systems in Africa pose important food safety challenges. Food processing approaches, traditionally practiced by African societies can be used to effectively to reduce food safety risks (e.g., fermentation when done at small-scale). However, mass production and long-distance transport of foods, which are now common practice, bring new food safety challenges. Food safety along the production to consumption continuum is characterized in the majority of the cases by the involvement of informal actors with sub-optimal food handling practices, creating major impacts on public health and the economy. Generally, the current complexity of food systems makes solutions not always straight forward. Globally, unsafe food causes an estimated 600 million illnesses, and 420,000 deaths and Africa disproportionately bears the highest burden of foodborne diseases. With few exceptions, the issue of food safety has not been given comparable emphasis on the continent and, when it has, the focus is largely on food commodities destined for international market. This presentation covers the major foodborne hazards (microbiological and chemical) in the African context and describes local and continental examples of food safety initiatives aimed at reducing the burden of foodborne disease and improving public health. Specifically, the application of risk-based and One Health approaches to reduce foodborne diseases will be emphasised. Examples of action research and political decision making around food safety at the continental level will be provided. Coordinated and tailored efforts that take into account the complex nature of global and African food safety systems are clearly needed. 2022-03-29 2022-04-07T07:21:44Z 2022-04-07T07:21:44Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119275 en Open Access application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.presentationml.presentation International Livestock Research Institute Amenu, K., Alonso, S., Mutua, F., Roesel, K., Lindahl, J., Kowalcyk, B., Knight-Jones, T. and Grace, D. 2022. Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives. Oral presentation at the 37th World Veterinary Association Congress, 29-31 March 2022, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle food safety
policies
Amenu, K.
Alonso, Silvia
Mutua, Florence K.
Roesel, Kristina
Lindahl, Johanna F.
Kowalcyk, B.
Knight-Jones, Theodore J.D.
Grace, Delia
Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title_full Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title_fullStr Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title_full_unstemmed Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title_short Better food safety solutions in Africa: Understanding the complex social, economic and policy perspectives
title_sort better food safety solutions in africa understanding the complex social economic and policy perspectives
topic food safety
policies
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119275
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