Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa

Africa bears the highest per capita burden of foodborne disease globally, and much of this is the result of consumption of fresh foods sold in traditional or informal markets. These include open public markets, small shops, kiosks or dukas, street food and food sold in pubs and eateries. Recent evid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Grace, Delia
Format: Abstract
Language:Inglés
Published: International Livestock Research Institute 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175463
_version_ 1855515719034208256
author Grace, Delia
author_browse Grace, Delia
author_facet Grace, Delia
author_sort Grace, Delia
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Africa bears the highest per capita burden of foodborne disease globally, and much of this is the result of consumption of fresh foods sold in traditional or informal markets. These include open public markets, small shops, kiosks or dukas, street food and food sold in pubs and eateries. Recent evidence suggests the informal sector is likely to persist for years if not decades. The informal food sector is vast, un-organised, heterogeneous, and poorly regulated. While these characteristics make food safety assurance difficult, the informal sector also provides an essential service in ensuring availability of nutritious, affordable food while providing livelihoods for millions of poor people many of them women. The challenge is hence to reduce the health and environmental risks emanating from these markets while securing or increasing the nutrition and livelihood benefits. While earlier research into food safety in informal markets focused on understanding the risks, burden, risk factors and priority hazards, recent years have seen the start of research into risk management options. One of the most promising is the “Three-Legged Stool” approach which argues that food safety in informal markets can be improved if, and only if, three aspects are simultaneously tackled 1) building an enabling regulatory environment; 2) ensuring training and technologies for value chain actors; and 3) getting incentives in place for behavioural change. We report on six recently completed projects using this approach to address 1) milk sold by informal vendors in Kenya; b) chicken sold by street restaurants in Burkina Faso; c) meat produced in local abattoirs in Kenya; d) beef sold in small butchers in Ethiopia; e} tomatoes sold by market vendors in Ethiopia; and f) vegetables sold by market vendors in Nigeria. These projects used a variety of ways to engage with authorities and train farmers and likewise a diversity of appropriate technologies and incentives for behaviour change. They varied in their ability to improve actor knowledge, attitude and practice, in reducing foodborne disease risk, and in the effectiveness of incentives deployed. We discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the different strategies and make recommendations for future research.
format Abstract
id CGSpace175463
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1754632025-11-04T16:25:10Z Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa Grace, Delia animal products food safety research Africa bears the highest per capita burden of foodborne disease globally, and much of this is the result of consumption of fresh foods sold in traditional or informal markets. These include open public markets, small shops, kiosks or dukas, street food and food sold in pubs and eateries. Recent evidence suggests the informal sector is likely to persist for years if not decades. The informal food sector is vast, un-organised, heterogeneous, and poorly regulated. While these characteristics make food safety assurance difficult, the informal sector also provides an essential service in ensuring availability of nutritious, affordable food while providing livelihoods for millions of poor people many of them women. The challenge is hence to reduce the health and environmental risks emanating from these markets while securing or increasing the nutrition and livelihood benefits. While earlier research into food safety in informal markets focused on understanding the risks, burden, risk factors and priority hazards, recent years have seen the start of research into risk management options. One of the most promising is the “Three-Legged Stool” approach which argues that food safety in informal markets can be improved if, and only if, three aspects are simultaneously tackled 1) building an enabling regulatory environment; 2) ensuring training and technologies for value chain actors; and 3) getting incentives in place for behavioural change. We report on six recently completed projects using this approach to address 1) milk sold by informal vendors in Kenya; b) chicken sold by street restaurants in Burkina Faso; c) meat produced in local abattoirs in Kenya; d) beef sold in small butchers in Ethiopia; e} tomatoes sold by market vendors in Ethiopia; and f) vegetables sold by market vendors in Nigeria. These projects used a variety of ways to engage with authorities and train farmers and likewise a diversity of appropriate technologies and incentives for behaviour change. They varied in their ability to improve actor knowledge, attitude and practice, in reducing foodborne disease risk, and in the effectiveness of incentives deployed. We discuss the strengths and weaknesses of the different strategies and make recommendations for future research. 2025-06-27 2025-07-03T07:41:01Z 2025-07-03T07:41:01Z Abstract https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175463 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Grace, D. 2025. Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa. Keynote lecture at the One Health Europa–Africa summit on veterinary public health and food safety: International conference on veterinary public health and food safety challenges and strategies in Africa. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle animal products
food safety
research
Grace, Delia
Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title_full Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title_fullStr Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title_short Recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in Africa
title_sort recent advances on research into interventions to improve food safety in africa
topic animal products
food safety
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/175463
work_keys_str_mv AT gracedelia recentadvancesonresearchintointerventionstoimprovefoodsafetyinafrica