Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of

Delia Grace Randolph, the world’s leading researcher on food safety in traditional markets makes a case for investment in food safety. Impacting billions of people directly and indirectly every year, foodborne disease (FBD) is a low-hanging fruit in the development agenda to improve the quality of l...

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Autor principal: Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
Formato: Video
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132708
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author Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
author_browse Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
author_facet Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
author_sort Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Delia Grace Randolph, the world’s leading researcher on food safety in traditional markets makes a case for investment in food safety. Impacting billions of people directly and indirectly every year, foodborne disease (FBD) is a low-hanging fruit in the development agenda to improve the quality of life in LMICs. Feed The Future’s EatSafe: Evidence and Action Towards Safe, Nutritious Food (EatSafe), highlights how the problem is immense, tractable, and has been neglected for decades by governments and international donors. Minimizing FBD in traditional markets not only prevents people from getting sick, but it helps seize the full potential of investments in nutrition, health, education, and financial independence. Traditional markets are the main source of nutrition for billions of people around the globe. They are often the main source of income for women and a hub of communal life. But with development dollars largely going to agriculture and nutrition programs, these market vendors have been neglected by the donors for decades. Traditional market vendors often lack the necessary infrastructure, food handling skills, and incentives to ensure that the food they sell is safe to consume. As a too common result, the available perishable, and highly nutritious foods, like meat, GLV, eggs, and dairy, often contain pathogens, such as salmonella, that compromise human health--particularly in young children, the elderly population, and the immunosuppressed. But this challenge presents a great opportunity to improve the lives of millions of people globally. With the reduction of a relatively small number of pathogens from these markets, we could eliminate more than 80% of the disease. How do we do that? Delia walks us through the Three-Legged Stool Approach to food safety: creating enabling environments, training vendors, and ensuring that incentives are in place for the vendors to change their food handling practices. She stresses that consumer demand for safe food must be the engine that gives the momentum to the work toward safer food in traditional markets.
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spelling CGSpace1327082024-11-05T07:02:21Z Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition food safety animal products markets Delia Grace Randolph, the world’s leading researcher on food safety in traditional markets makes a case for investment in food safety. Impacting billions of people directly and indirectly every year, foodborne disease (FBD) is a low-hanging fruit in the development agenda to improve the quality of life in LMICs. Feed The Future’s EatSafe: Evidence and Action Towards Safe, Nutritious Food (EatSafe), highlights how the problem is immense, tractable, and has been neglected for decades by governments and international donors. Minimizing FBD in traditional markets not only prevents people from getting sick, but it helps seize the full potential of investments in nutrition, health, education, and financial independence. Traditional markets are the main source of nutrition for billions of people around the globe. They are often the main source of income for women and a hub of communal life. But with development dollars largely going to agriculture and nutrition programs, these market vendors have been neglected by the donors for decades. Traditional market vendors often lack the necessary infrastructure, food handling skills, and incentives to ensure that the food they sell is safe to consume. As a too common result, the available perishable, and highly nutritious foods, like meat, GLV, eggs, and dairy, often contain pathogens, such as salmonella, that compromise human health--particularly in young children, the elderly population, and the immunosuppressed. But this challenge presents a great opportunity to improve the lives of millions of people globally. With the reduction of a relatively small number of pathogens from these markets, we could eliminate more than 80% of the disease. How do we do that? Delia walks us through the Three-Legged Stool Approach to food safety: creating enabling environments, training vendors, and ensuring that incentives are in place for the vendors to change their food handling practices. She stresses that consumer demand for safe food must be the engine that gives the momentum to the work toward safer food in traditional markets. 2023-10-30 2023-11-03T13:28:08Z 2023-11-03T13:28:08Z Video https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132708 en Open Access Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition. 2023. Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of. Video. Geneva, Switzerland: GAIN.
spellingShingle food safety
animal products
markets
Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition
Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title_full Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title_fullStr Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title_full_unstemmed Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title_short Food safety: The biggest development challenge you’ve never heard of
title_sort food safety the biggest development challenge you ve never heard of
topic food safety
animal products
markets
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/132708
work_keys_str_mv AT globalallianceforimprovednutrition foodsafetythebiggestdevelopmentchallengeyouveneverheardof