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Today is World Food Safety Day

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Wednesday, June 7, 2023

World Food Safety Day which is commemorated annually on 7 June –  throws the spotlight on food safety awareness and the steps required to prevent, detect and manage foodborne risks and illnesses. Food safety refers to handling, preparing, transporting and storing of foodstuffs in a way that best reduces the risk of persons becoming sick from foodborne illnesses. It is a global concern and covers a variety of different areas throughout the entire food supply chain, from farm to factory to fork. All members of the food supply chain must comply with established standards and legislation to maintain food safety. This includes proper handling and thorough cooking of foodstuff, keeping foodstuff at the correct temperature, preventing cross-contamination through proper separation of raw and cooked foodstuffs and always using clean, safe water and raw materials to limit risk. The use of clean equipment and utensils is a must as well, as is the continuous practice of proper handwashing and good housekeeping. ‘Food is such a critical part of our daily lives, but to many, food safety isn’t something that is top of mind. We take a lot for granted in this space, but there are actually very rigorous demands placed on everyone, from producers to retailers and fast food outlets, to you and I at home, in ensuring that what we serve is safe for consumption. The load-shedding crisis has caused additional challenges, particularly around maintaining the cold chain and the risk of food spoiling, and the recent cholera outbreak in parts of the country too has amplified the continued need for vigilance in food handling,’ said Mayoral Committee Member for Community Services and Health, Councillor Patricia Van der Ross. Cholera can be contracted by ingesting water or food contaminated with human faeces. The World Health Organisation’s five keys to safer food help mitigate the risk of cholera or any other foodborne illnesses:  Keep clean: Keep hands, surfaces and equipment clean. Separate raw and cooked: Store raw and cooked food in separate containers and use separate utensils and equipment for raw and cooked food.  Cook thoroughly: Cook all foods thoroughly and reheat to piping hot before serving.  Keep food at safe temperatures: Store and thaw foods in the fridge.  Use safe water and raw food: Fresh fruit, vegetables and pasteurised milk. ‘The City’s Environmental Health Practitioners conduct thousands of inspections at food-related premises every year, enforcing standards to help reduce the risk of foodborne and waterborne illnesses, and we commend their efforts. Add to that the hundreds of education and awareness outreaches, and we start seeing just how seriously they take food safety, and how important it is for all of us to pay attention and implement the safety measures in our kitchens,’ added Councillor Van der Ross. The role and scope of Environmental Health Practitioners in ensuring food safety and food standards include: Licencing and certification of food premises  Inspection, monitoring and auditing of food premises  Implementation and enforcement of food legislation relating to foodstuffs and the hygiene requirements/standards of food premises Sampling of various foodstuffs for microbiological and chemical compliance  Advise, guide and train the food industry, retailers and consumers regarding relevant food legislative requirements  Act on foodstuffs-related eventualities such as recalls, suspected food poisoning cases and investigation of foodstuffs-related complaints  Implement legal action in all cases of legislative non-compliance  Ensuring foodstuffs offered for sale are fit for human consumption and authentic  Issuing of health certification for export A comprehensive list of food safety tips and managing the impacts of load-shedding is available here: https://bit.ly/3K0Idq3 The post Today is World Food Safety Day appeared first on SAPeople - Worldwide South African News.

World Food Safety Day which is commemorated annually on 7 June –  throws the spotlight on food safety awareness and the steps required to prevent, detect and manage foodborne risks and illnesses. Food safety refers to handling, preparing, transporting and storing of foodstuffs in a way that best reduces the risk of persons becoming sick […] The post Today is World Food Safety Day appeared first on SAPeople - Worldwide South African News.

World Food Safety Day which is commemorated annually on 7 June –  throws the spotlight on food safety awareness and the steps required to prevent, detect and manage foodborne risks and illnesses.

Food safety refers to handling, preparing, transporting and storing of foodstuffs in a way that best reduces the risk of persons becoming sick from foodborne illnesses.

It is a global concern and covers a variety of different areas throughout the entire food supply chain, from farm to factory to fork.

All members of the food supply chain must comply with established standards and legislation to maintain food safety.

This includes proper handling and thorough cooking of foodstuff, keeping foodstuff at the correct temperature, preventing cross-contamination through proper separation of raw and cooked foodstuffs and always using clean, safe water and raw materials to limit risk.

The use of clean equipment and utensils is a must as well, as is the continuous practice of proper handwashing and good housekeeping.

‘Food is such a critical part of our daily lives, but to many, food safety isn’t something that is top of mind. We take a lot for granted in this space, but there are actually very rigorous demands placed on everyone, from producers to retailers and fast food outlets, to you and I at home, in ensuring that what we serve is safe for consumption. The load-shedding crisis has caused additional challenges, particularly around maintaining the cold chain and the risk of food spoiling, and the recent cholera outbreak in parts of the country too has amplified the continued need for vigilance in food handling,’ said Mayoral Committee Member for Community Services and Health, Councillor Patricia Van der Ross.

Cholera can be contracted by ingesting water or food contaminated with human faeces.

The World Health Organisation’s five keys to safer food help mitigate the risk of cholera or any other foodborne illnesses:

  •  Keep clean: Keep hands, surfaces and equipment clean.
  • Separate raw and cooked: Store raw and cooked food in separate containers and use separate utensils and equipment for raw and cooked food.
  •  Cook thoroughly: Cook all foods thoroughly and reheat to piping hot before serving.
  •  Keep food at safe temperatures: Store and thaw foods in the fridge.
  •  Use safe water and raw food: Fresh fruit, vegetables and pasteurised milk.

‘The City’s Environmental Health Practitioners conduct thousands of inspections at food-related premises every year, enforcing standards to help reduce the risk of foodborne and waterborne illnesses, and we commend their efforts. Add to that the hundreds of education and awareness outreaches, and we start seeing just how seriously they take food safety, and how important it is for all of us to pay attention and implement the safety measures in our kitchens,’ added Councillor Van der Ross.

The role and scope of Environmental Health Practitioners in ensuring food safety and food standards include:

  • Licencing and certification of food premises
  •  Inspection, monitoring and auditing of food premises
  •  Implementation and enforcement of food legislation relating to foodstuffs and the hygiene requirements/standards of food premises
  • Sampling of various foodstuffs for microbiological and chemical compliance
  •  Advise, guide and train the food industry, retailers and consumers regarding relevant food legislative requirements
  •  Act on foodstuffs-related eventualities such as recalls, suspected food poisoning cases and investigation of foodstuffs-related complaints
  •  Implement legal action in all cases of legislative non-compliance
  •  Ensuring foodstuffs offered for sale are fit for human consumption and authentic
  •  Issuing of health certification for export

A comprehensive list of food safety tips and managing the impacts of load-shedding is available here: https://bit.ly/3K0Idq3

The post Today is World Food Safety Day appeared first on SAPeople - Worldwide South African News.

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People who grow their own fruit and veg waste less food and eat more healthily, says research

Those who grow their own food in gardens and allotments waste less and eat more healthily – but not everyone has the chance to do so.The post People who grow their own fruit and veg waste less food and eat more healthily, says research appeared first on SAPeople - Worldwide South African News.

The rising cost of living is making it harder for people, especially those on lower incomes (who often have poorer diets), to afford to eat healthily. Despite this, households in the UK continue to waste a shocking amount of food – including around 68kg of fruit and vegetables each year.Food waste is not only damaging to your pocket, it’s also bad for the environment too. Globally, 1.3 billion tonnes of food are wasted every year, generating about 8% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. These emissions arise from unused food at all stages of the food supply chain, from production to decomposition.However, our recent study revealed that those who grow their own food in gardens and allotments waste an average of just 3.4kg of fruits and vegetables – 95% less than the UK average. These households adopted various practices to minimise food waste, including preserving or giving away their excess produce.There has been renewed interest in growing fresh produce in gardens, community gardens and allotments in the UK and elsewhere in recent years. But the available supply of allotments is not enough to meet increasing demand.Allocating more land for household fruit and vegetable production could make a significant contribution to the availability of fresh produce for urban residents.Research has shown that using a mere 10% of the available space in the English city of Sheffield for food cultivation could supply enough fruit and vegetables to meet the needs of 15% of the city’s population. And more people growing their own food could also reduce waste.Food waste generates about 8% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. Joaquin Corbalan P/ShutterstockFood diariesOur study involved 197 households in the UK that grow their own food. We asked them to maintain a food diary, where they recorded the amounts of fruits and vegetables they acquired each week. We received complete records from 85 separate households.They specified whether each item was cultivated in their garden or allotment, bought from shops or markets, sourced from other growers, or foraged in the wild. The households also recorded the quantity of the produce they gave away to family and friends and the amounts they had to throw out.Our findings suggest that individuals who grow their own food may be more inclined to avoid food wastage than the average person in the UK. This is possibly because they place a higher value on the produce they had grown themselves.The results align with earlier research that was conducted in Germany and Italy. This study found that the amount of discarded food was greatest among people who shopped exclusively in large supermarkets. People who purchased items from various small stores tended to waste less food, while those who grew their own food wasted the least.Our findings also suggest that the households we studied can produce roughly half of all the vegetables, and 20% of the fruit, they consume annually. These households consumed 70% more fruits and vegetables (slightly more than six portions per day) than the national average.Eating plenty of fruits and vegetables as part of a balanced and nutritious diet is key to maintaining good health. This kind of diet can help prevent diseases such as type 2 diabetes, certain cancers and heart disease.Yet, in the UK, less than one-third of adults and only about 8% of teenagers eat their “five-a-day”. This target, which is based on advice from the World Health Organization, recommends eating at least five 80g portions of fruit and veg every day.Grow-your-own households adopted various practices to minimise food waste. Alan Goodwin Photo/ShutterstockGrow your own food securityGrowing your own food can improve access to fresh fruits and vegetables, promote good health and reduce food waste. However, several obstacles hinder involvement in household food production. These obstacles include limited access to the land, skills and time needed to grow your own fruit and veg.Approximately one in eight UK households lack access to a garden. And, since the 1950s, the availability of allotments throughout the UK has declined by 60%. This decline has been particularly evident in more deprived areas of the country, where people could benefit most from better availability of nutritious foods.We also found that those who grew their own food dedicated approximately four hours each week to working on their allotment or garden. Unfortunately, not everyone has the luxury of having the time to do so.Nonetheless, raising awareness about the benefits of home food production, beyond just food security and reducing waste, to include its positive impacts on social cohesion, overall well-being and biodiversity could encourage more people to participate. Increasing demand for growing space may also encourage local authorities to allocate more land for this purpose.Whether you grow your own food or not, everyone can adopt mindful practices when purchasing or growing food. Planning ahead and freezing or sharing excess food with others to prevent it from going to waste are good options.ALSO READ: Five healthy foods that will save you money at the tillBut some food waste is inevitable. Composting it instead of sending it to a landfill will substantially lower its impact on the planet.Boglarka Zilla Gulyas, Postdoctoral Research Associate in SCHARR, University of Sheffield and Jill Edmondson, Research Fellow in Environmental Change, University of SheffieldThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The post People who grow their own fruit and veg waste less food and eat more healthily, says research appeared first on SAPeople - Worldwide South African News.

Lead poisoning could be killing more people than HIV, malaria, and car accidents combined

A mother and child at a Médecins Sans Frontières clinic in Anka, Nigeria, the site of a major lead poisoning outbreak in 2019. | Kola Sulaimon/AFP via Getty Images However bad you think lead poisoning is for the world, it’s worse. Everyone knows lead is bad for you. We’ve known this for a very long time: in the first century BCE, the Roman architect Vitruvius warned against using lead in pipes, observing the “pallid color” of plumbers forced to work with it. We know leaded gasoline leads to premature death in the elderly, that high lead exposure can substantially reduce IQ, and that there is likely a relationship between lead exposure in children and high rates of crime later on.Yet lead is still everywhere — especially in poorer countries. Pure Earth, the largest nonprofit working on lead contamination internationally, recently conducted a massive survey of products in 25 low and middle-income countries, from Peru to Nigeria to India to the Philippines, to test for lead levels in household goods. In their sample they found high levels of lead in 52 percent of metal and 45 percent of ceramic foodware (a category including dishes, utensils, pots and pans), as well as 41 percent of house paints and 13 percent of toys.This has major consequences. A new paper in Lancet Planetary Health, authored by economist Bjorn Larsen and Ernesto Sánchez-Triana, World Bank’s global lead for pollution management, tries to quantify the scale of the lead problem globally. The authors estimate that some 5.5 million people die prematurely due to lead exposure every year, and that the problem as a whole imposes a social cost of $6 trillion a year. That equals 6.9 percent of total world GDP.These are massive numbers, and it’s worth putting them into context: 5.5 million deaths from lead in 2019 exceeds the number of people who died that year from car accidents (1.2 million), tuberculosis (1.18 million), HIV/AIDS (863,837), suicide (759,028), and malaria (643,381) combined. If accurate, the figure means that a little under one in 10 deaths globally can be traced to lead. Meanwhile, a social cost of 6.9 percent of global GDP exceeds a recent World Bank estimate of the social cost of air pollution, which added up to 6.1 percent of GDP.Digging into the cost of leadThese massive numbers may seem more plausible when you consider just how prevalent serious lead exposure is in developing countries.A 2021 evidence review led by environmental scientist Bret Ericson reviewed blood lead surveys in 34 nations, which together account for over two-thirds of the world’s population. Overall, those studies estimated that 48.5 percent of children had high lead levels (defined as above 5 micrograms per deciliter, or µg/dL). Levels of exposure varied greatly, with surveys in a few countries (like Tanzania) not finding any children with blood lead levels above 5 µg/dL, and other countries (like Pakistan) showing huge majorities with levels that high. (Of course, it’s possible that limitations in these surveys underestimate lead exposure in some countries.) We can identify a number of possible sources of these high lead levels. Historically, the major driver was lead in gasoline, but in 2021 the last country on Earth still using lead for that purpose (Algeria) phased it out. Lead is widely used in car batteries, plane fuel, and the consumer goods that Pure Earth surveyed in its report, but which source is most important in contributing to poisoning in children is still unclear.For one thing, we know surprisingly little about how lead in, say, a plate translates into lead in the system of a human eating off that plate. The Pure Earth study included a test of some aluminum cookware, wherein it boiled acetic acid (the main ingredient in vinegar) in them for two hours, and then tested the liquid for lead. Fifty-two percent of the pots had leached an amount of lead above the World Health Organization guideline level for drinking water. That suggests that food cooked in such pots would contain lead, which would then poison children who drink it. But much more research is needed.Indeed, “more research is needed” is a decent summary for the whole state of lead research. The Lancet Planetary Health study finding that lead kills 5.5 million people a year relied on lead poisoning estimates from the Global Burden of Disease study, which sometimes produces its numbers not based on surveys of actual people, but on other data (like the share of population in urban areas, and the year that leaded gasoline was phased out) that is in turn predictive of lead exposure.Further, the Lancet study estimates deaths caused by lead-induced cardiovascular disease based on studies of the US, estimating the effect of lead on cardiovascular disease rates. Air pollution expert Roy Harrison told the news agency AFP that applying such findings to the whole world is “a huge jump of faith.”That said, any errors could go in both directions. The actual surveys that Ericson and coauthors compiled of blood lead levels showed that the problem was worse than the Global Burden of Disease data suggested. It might be that lead is a greater risk factor for cardiovascular disease in poor countries than in the US, because there are more medical resources to counter the negative effects of lead in the US. All of that could mean the new study actually underestimates the damage lead is doing.The only way to have a stronger sense of the scale of the problem is to invest more in understanding it. A 2021 report found that nonprofits spend, at most, $10 million a year addressing lead exposure in developing countries, with much of that money coming from governments. For comparison, global efforts to fight HIV/AIDS, which, if this new report is to be believed, kills about one-fifth as many people globally as lead does, got $8.2 billion in government funding in 2022 alone. The point here is not that we’re spending too much on HIV/AIDS — we may still be spending too little there too. But we’re spending far too little on understanding and tackling lead exposure, when it could be a problem of similar or greater magnitude. It’s among the most neglected problems in global health, and one where a substantial investment could go a long way.

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