The Concept Of Food Safety And Food Quality

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2.1.2 Food safety concept

United States Department of Agriculture (2006) reported that food safety is the state of acceptable and tolerable risks of illness, disease, or injury from the consumption of foods. It is achieved through policies, regulation, standards, research, engineering designs and technology surveillance and monitoring and other applicable measures to reduce the risk or control hazard in the food supply chain. This includes all food and pre-food materials, starting with agricultural production and continuing through harvesting, processing manufacturing, storage, distribution, handling, preparation and any other activities up to the points of consumption that is the "farm-to-fork" continuum. The level of acceptable and …show more content…

Food safety refers to all those hazards, whether chronic or acute, that may make food injurious to the health of the consumer. It is not negotiable. Quality includes all other attributes that influence a product’s value to the consumer. This includes negative attributes such as spoilage, contamination with filth, discoloration, off odors and positive attributes such as the origin, color, flavor, texture and processing method of the food. This distinction between safety and quality has implications for public policy and influences the nature and content of the food control system most suited to meet predetermined national …show more content…

(2011) agreed with York et al. (2009) in that Food safety is a global issue. Governments all over the world are working to decrease food borne diseases and illnesses. Consumers’ concerns and new food safety issues are the drivers for this heightened awareness (WHO, 2007).although training alone may not be sufficient to improve food handler's safe food practices. Despite food safety training requirements 59% of reported foods borne illnesses have been traced back to commercial foodservice operations (CDC, 2006). “The food service sector needs to adopt appropriate control measures, and follow advice provided by national food agencies in order to reduce the risk of infection”. Preventative measures can be taken to mitigate the risks of food borne illnesses and

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