How perspectives on food safety of vendors and consumers translate into food choice behaviors in six African and Asian countries
Isanovic, S, Constantinides, SV, Frongillo, EA, Bhandari, S, Samin, S, Kenney, E, Wertheim-Heck, S, Nordhagen, S, Holdsworth, M, Dominguez Salas, Paula ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8753-4221, Ambikapathi, R, Laar, A, Patil, CL, Kulkarni, B, Bukachi, SA, Ngutu, M and Blake, CE (2022) How perspectives on food safety of vendors and consumers translate into food choice behaviors in six African and Asian countries. Current Developments in Nutrition, 7 (1):100015. pp. 1-12. ISSN 2475-2991 (Online) (doi:10.1016/j.cdnut.2022.100015)
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Abstract
Background
Consumption of unsafe foods increases morbidity and mortality and is currently an issue, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Policy actions to ensure food safety are dominated by mitigation of biological and chemical hazards through supply-side risk management, lessening the degree to which consumer perspectives of food safety are considered.
Objective
This study aimed to provide an in-depth understanding, from vendor and consumer perspectives, of how food safety concerns of consumers translate into their subsequent food choice behaviors in six diverse low- and middle-income countries.
Methods
Six Drivers of Food Choice projects (2016-2022) provided transcripts from 17 focus group discussions and 343 interviews in Ghana, Guinea, India, Kenya, Tanzania, and Vietnam. Qualitative thematic analysis was used to identify emerging themes important to food safety.
Results
The analysis suggests that consumers constructed meaning about food safety through personal lived experience and social influences. Community and family members contributed knowledge about food safety. Concerns about food safety were influenced by reputations of, and relationships with, food vendors. Consumers’ mistrust of food vendors was amplified by purposeful adulteration or unsafe selling practices and new methods used to produce food. Consumers were reassured of food safety by positive relationships with vendors; meals cooked at home; implementation of policies and following of regulations; vendor adherence to environmental sanitation and food hygiene practices; cleanliness of vendors’ appearance; and vendors’ or producers’ agency to use risk mitigation strategies in production, processing, and distribution of food.
Conclusions
Consumers integrated their meanings, knowledge, and concerns about food safety to achieve assurance about the safety of their foods when making food choice decisions. The success of food-safety policies hinges on consideration of consumers’ food safety concerns in their design and implementation, alongside actions to reduce risk in food supply.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | food safety; vendors; consumers; food drivers |
Subjects: | B Philosophy. Psychology. Religion > BF Psychology H Social Sciences > H Social Sciences (General) S Agriculture > S Agriculture (General) |
Faculty / School / Research Centre / Research Group: | Faculty of Engineering & Science Faculty of Engineering & Science > Natural Resources Institute Faculty of Engineering & Science > Natural Resources Institute > Food & Markets Department Faculty of Engineering & Science > Natural Resources Institute > Centre for Food Systems Research Faculty of Engineering & Science > Natural Resources Institute > Centre for Food Systems Research > Food Safety and Quality |
Last Modified: | 27 Nov 2024 14:49 |
URI: | http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/42655 |
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