Mar 31, 2015

10 Facts WHO Wants You To Know On Food Safety

10 facts WHO wants you to know on food safety

“Food safety: from farm to plate, make food safe” is the theme of World Health Day 2015. The day focuses on demonstrating the importance of food safety along the whole length of the food chain in a globalised world, from production and transport, to preparation and consumption.
Over the past half century, the process by which food gets from the farm to the plate has changed drastically. Food contamination that occurs in one place may affect the health of consumers elsewhere. This means that everyone along the production chain, from producer to consumer, must observe safe food handling practices.
As per Dr Poonam Khetrapal, Regional Director, WHO SEARO, “Food safety is critical for public health as foodborne diseases affect people’s health and well-being. Unsafe food creates a vicious cycle of disease and malnutrition, particularly affecting infants, young children, the elderly and the sick. Foodborne diseases impede socio-economic development by straining health care systems and adversely impacting national economies, tourism and trade.”
Here are ten important facts that everyone should know about food safety.
1. More than 200 diseases are spread through food.
Millions of people fall ill every year and many die as a result of eating unsafe food. Diarrhoeal diseases alone kill an estimated 1.5 million children annually, and most of these illnesses are attributed to contaminated food or drinking water. Proper food preparation can prevent most foodborne diseases.
2. Contaminated food can cause long-term health problems.
The most common symptoms of foodborne disease are stomach pains, vomiting and diarrhoea. Food contaminated with heavy metals or with naturally occurring toxins can also cause long-term health problems including cancer and neurological disorders.
3. Foodborne diseases affect vulnerable people harder than other groups.
Infections caused by contaminated food have a much higher impact on populations with poor or fragile health status and can easily lead to serious illness and death. For infants, pregnant women, the sick and the elderly, the consequences of foodborne disease are usually more severe and may be fatal.
4. There are many opportunities for food contamination to take place.
Today’s food supply is complex and involves a range of different stages including on-farm production, slaughtering or harvesting, processing, storage, transport and distribution before the food reaches the consumers.
5. Globalization makes food safety more complex and essential.
Globalization of food production and trade is making the food chain longer and complicates foodborne disease outbreak investigation and product recall in case of emergency.
6. Food safety needs multisectoral and multidisciplinary action
To improve food safety, a multitude of different professionals are working together, making use of the best available science and technologies. Different governmental departments and agencies, encompassing public health, agriculture, education and trade, need to collaborate and communicate with each other and engage with the civil society including consumer groups.
7. Food contamination also affects the economy and society as a whole.
Food contamination has far reaching effects beyond direct public health consequences – it undermines food exports, tourism, livelihoods of food handlers and economic development, both in developed and developing countries.
8. Some harmful bacteria are becoming resistant to drug treatments.
Antimicrobial resistance is a growing global health concern. Overuse and misuse of antibiotics in animal husbandry, in addition to human clinical uses, is one of the factors leading to the emergence and spread of antimicrobial resistance. Antimicrobial-resistant bacteria in animals may be transmitted to humans via food.
9. Everybody has a role to play in keeping food safe.
Food safety is a shared responsibility between governments, industry, producers, academia, and consumers. Everyone has a role to play. Achieving food safety is a multi-sectoral effort requiring expertise from a range of different disciplines – toxicology, microbiology, parasitology, nutrition, health economics, and human and veterinary medicine. Local communities, women’s groups and school education also play an important role. You can keep food safe in your kitchen by applying the five keys to food safety: keep kitchen, utensils, hands clean while cooking, separate raw from cooked food, cook food thoroughly, keep food at safe temperatures, use safe raw materials.
10. Consumers arm yourself with information on how to keep your food safe!
People should make informed and wise food choices and adopt adequate behaviors. They should know common food hazards and how to handle food safely, using the information provided in food labelling.

Safe food, from the farm to the plate

SNACK ON THE ROAD: “Street food is emerging as an important source of food for a large proportion of the population in urban and peri-urban settings.” Picture shows Mohammad Ali Road in Mumbai.

Food safety is critical for public health as food-borne diseases affect people’s well-being,strain health-care systems, and adversely impact national economies, tourism and trade
How often do we ask ourselves if the food we are eating is safe? Do we know if it is free of bacteria, viruses, parasites, chemicals, other contaminates, additives and adulterants which can cause over 200 diseases ranging from diarrhoea to cancer? Every year, diarrhoea caused by contaminated food and water kills 2.2 million people, including 1.9 million children, globally. Unsafe food and water kills an estimated 7,00,000 children in the World Health Organization’s South-East Asia Region every year. Access to safe food remains a challenge in the region. Whether as individuals, families, farmers, contributors to and handlers of the food chain or policymakers, we need to make food safety our priority.
Food safety is critical for public health as food-borne diseases affect people’s health and well-being. Unsafe food creates a vicious cycle of disease and malnutrition, particularly affecting infants, young children, the elderly and the sick. Food-borne diseases impede socio-economic development by straining health care systems and adversely impacting national economies, tourism and trade.
Multisectoral collaboration
Since food passes through multiple hands from the farm to reach our plates, ensuring food safety requires multisectoral collaboration. The approach needs to be preventive — to improve food safety and quality through application of good farming practices by using agro chemicals or veterinary drugs only in the prescribed amount. Good storage, transportation, retail and restaurant practices are equally important to make food safe.
Street foods are emerging as an important source of food for a large proportion of the population in urban and peri-urban settings. Street food as a source of food-borne diseases therefore assumes public health significance.
Also, new threats to food safety are constantly emerging — the impact of climate change on food production, distribution and consumption; emerging biological and environmental contamination of the food chain, new technologies, new and emerging pathogens; antimicrobial resistance.
Countries need to have a comprehensive food safety policy, legislation and national food safety programmes encompassing all the sectors and aspects for food safety.
Though most countries in the region have food safety policies, enforcement remains a challenge. Food quality and safety standards are usually strictly followed for exportable food commodities, but not always enforced for food destined for the domestic market. Food safety and quality should be ensured through stringent control and inspection mechanisms for export as well as the domestic market.
Adulteration of food is another problem as informal food production and distribution systems are deeply entrenched at the community level in the region. Contamination of mustard oil with argemone oil in 1998 and contamination of imported milk and infant formula with melamine in 2008 are among the few events that raised food safety concerns among consumers and policymakers in the region and globally.
Five keys to good safety
The most pertinent of all the measures is creating awareness among individuals to ensure that their food is safe. In this context, ‘five keys’ to food safety need to be promoted — maintain cleanliness, separate raw and cooked food, cook thoroughly, keep food at correct temperature and use safe water and raw materials.
As food supply becomes increasingly globalised, there is an urgent requirement to strengthen food safety systems in and between all countries. Establishment of a network for food safety authorities in partnership with countries can help promote the exchange of food safety information and improve collaboration among food safety authorities at national and international levels.
There is also need to help countries prevent, detect and respond to food-borne disease outbreaks using the Codex Alimentarius, a collection of international food standards, guidelines and codes of practice covering all the main foods and processes.
In addition, food safety should be adequately incorporated in national disaster-management programmes and emergencies. Access to safe water and quality food is a major problem during flooding, earthquakes and other natural disasters. There is a likelihood of food in the affected areas getting contaminated and causing outbreaks of food-borne disease.
As part of its Regional Food Safety Strategy, countries in the region need to initiate, develop and sustain multisectoral approaches and measures for promotion of food safety among all population groups. Some countries have taken novel and notable initiatives such as the mobile food courts in Bangladesh, the establishment of a Food Standard and Safety Authority in India, and certification of street food vendors with a “Clean Food, Good Taste” logo in Thailand. This year’s World Health Day theme focuses on food safety. Food safety must be an essential component of national health, food, agriculture, animal husbandry, fisheries, water, sanitation and environment-related programmes. Food safety is a shared responsibility. Let us work together to make our food safe and to contribute to better health of people.

Vets to inspect animal products' hygiene, standards


KATHUA, MARCH 30- Deputy Commissioner Kathua,Dr Shahid Iqbal Choudhary, taking a serious note of non-compliance of public health standards by animal products' outlets has directed the expert veterinary doctors to carry out extensive market inspections and check the standard of hygiene and public health observed.
Chief Animal Husbandry Officer and District Sheep Husbandry Officer, Kathua, have been asked to provide the services of expert veterinary professionals and Veterinary Assistant Surgeons for inspection of milk, milk products, poultry and meat products being sold in market and in case of sub-standard or adulterated material being found report the cases of defaulters to Additional Deputy Commissioner Kathua Dr Mushtaq Ahmed who will initiate further proceedings against the defaulters under law.
The DC also asked departments of Animal Husbandry, Sheep Husbandry, CA & PD, Legal Metrology, Rural Development and Urban Local Bodies to carry out extensive awareness campaign through all means and also sensitize the business community regarding veterinary public health and legal provisions. He called upon officers to also run regular information strip on local cable channels on this issue and create awareness among masses.
Chief Animal Husbandry Officer and District Sheep Husbandry Officer will notify the veterinary doctors for various municipalities and rural areas, complaint cell for general public has been established to report any case of adulteration or quality compromise as well as selling of sub-standard products. Joint teaof Vets, CAPD, Legal Metrology and Municipality staff will carry out inspections.
The DC stressed upon highlighting the consumer affairs and according highest priority to it. A core committee headed by Additional Deputy Commissioner and comprised of Chief Animal Husbandry Officer, District Sheep Husbandry Officer, Assistant Director CAPD, Asst Director Legal Metrology, CEO Municipal Council, Tehsildars and Executive Officers shall monitor the progress on fortnightly basis for ensuring standards of food safety, public health and hygiene.

TOBACCO PRODUCTS SEIZED

Tamil Nadu Food Safety and Drug Administration Department (Food Safety Wing) officials seized over 700 kg of tobacco products from a shop at Ukkadam here on Monday. The total value of the seized products was estimated to be around Rs. 1.40 lakh. The officials have taken samples of the product.

உக்கடம் பிளாஸ்டிக் விற்பனை கடையில் 700 கிலோ தடை செய்யப்பட்ட புகையிலை பொருட்கள் பறிமுதல்

கோவை, மார்ச் 31:
உக்கடம் பிளாஸ்டிக் பொருட்கள் விற்பனை கடையில் விற்பனைக்கு வைத்திருந்த 700 கிலோ தடை செய்யப்பட்ட புகையிலை பொருட்களை உணவு பாதுகாப்பு பிரிவு அதிகாரிகள் பறிமுதல் செய்தனர்.
கோவை உக்கடம் அய்யாசாமி கோயில் வீதியை சேர்ந்தவர் ஷேர்சிங்(32). வடமாநிலத்தை சேர்ந்த இவர் குடும்பத்துடன் கோவையில் தங்கி உக்கடம் காய்கறி மார்க்கெட் அருகே பிளாஸ்டிக் பொருட்கள் விற்பனை கடை நடத்தி வருகிறார். இவரது கடையில் தடை செய்யப்பட்ட புகையிலை பொருட்கள் மறைத்து வைத்து விற்கப்படுவதாக கோவை மாவட்ட உணவு பாதுகாப்பு பிரிவு அதிகாரிகளுக்கு நேற்று தகவல் கிடைத்தது.
உணவு பாதுகாப்பு பிரிவு நியமன அதிகாரி கதிரவன் உத்தரவின் பேரில், உணவு பாதுகாப்பு பிரிவு அதிகாரிகள் சுருளி, வேலுசாமி, சக்திவேல் உள்ளிட்ட அதிகாரிகள் நேற்று தகவல் கிடைத்த கடையில் திடீர் சோதனை நடத்தினர். அதில் கடையின் உட்புறத்தில் உள்ள அறையில் விற்பனைக்காக 300 கிலோ புகையிலை பொருட்கள் மற்றும் கடைக்கு சொந்தமான குடோனில் 400 கிலோ புகையிலை பொருட்கள் என மொத்தம் 700 கிலோ புகையிலை பொருட்கள் பதுக்கி வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது தெரியவந்தது.
ஹான்ஸ் புகையிலையில் 3 வகைகள், பான்பராக் புகையிலையில் 3 வகைகள் என விற்பனைக்காக மறைத்து வைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த மொத்தம் 700 கிலோ தடை செய்யப்பட்ட புகையிலை பொருட்களை அதிகாரிகள் பறிமுதல் செய்தனர். இவற்றின் மதிப்பு ரூ.3 லட்சம் ஆகும்.
இதுதொடர்பாக கடை உரிமையாளர் ஷேர்சிங்கிடம் அதிகாரிகள் விசாரித்து வருகின்றனர். இதுகுறித்து உணவு பாதுகாப்பு பிரிவு அதிகாரிகள் கூறுகையில்,இந்த புகையிலை பொருட்கள் எங்கிருந்து வாங்கப்பட்டது, இதில் யார் யாருக்கு தொடர்புள்ளது என்பது குறித்து விசாரிக்கப்பட்டு வருகிறது, என்றனர்.

Worm found in food, 7 suffer food poisoning

COIMBATORE: Seven people from Kuniamuthur, in Coimbatire, were admitted in the government hospital, Coimbatore, with complaints of food poisoning on Sunday. All seven of them say they had gone together to a chaat outlet where a worm was found in a plate of mushroom fry. The food safety department raided the chaat outlet on Monday afternoon.
The seven of them, claimed that they had been suffering from severe diarrhea and bouts of vomiting since Sunday evening. "We went to the chaat outlet, attached to a departmental storethat sells products at lower prices, at around 7 am and ordered mushroom fry and cauliflower fry," said M Ilyas, a goldsmith from Kuniamuthur. "We found a worm in our plate of mushroom fry and pointed it out to the chaat stall staff," he said.
The manager of the stall reportedly apologized and offered to replace the plate with another dish. "He however kept insisting that the worm could not have come from his materials or from his stall," said M Shahjehan. "He then told us that we could take back our money and go, but he did not admit that his materials were inhygienic," he added.
The men claimed that hardly one-and-half hours after they consumed the dish, a few of them began suffering from diarrhea and nausea. "We are only feeling better now," said Ilyas.
The food safety department, suspect the food poisoning to have been triggered due to the use of spoilt mushroom or cauliflower, raided the canteen and the store. The stall in the canteen was reportedly shut down on Monday. "The chaat stall was shut down and wiped clean, not giving us an opportunity to collect samples of their raw materials," said designated food safety officer R Kathiravan. tnn"The patients admitted have also chosen not to file a complaint with the police or the food safety department," he said.
However, there is another suspicion that the whole incident might be motivated. " The chances of that big a worm being found in a dish, which involves cutting the vegetable into such small pieces and frying it, is small," said a food scientist Srijanani Sundararajan.

காளான் சாப்பிட்ட 7 பேர் அரசு ஆஸ்பத்திரியில் அனுமதி

கோவை, மார்ச் 31:குனியமுத்தூர்
திருவள்ளுவர் நகரை சேர்ந்தவர்கள் செரீப்(28), ரகமத்துல்லா(28), ஷாஜகான்(28), ரியாஸ்(28), சமீர்(21) உள்பட 7 பேர். இவர்கள் நேற்று முன்தினம் இரவு கரும்பு கடை பகுதியில் உள்ள ஒரு காளான் கடைக்கு சென்றுள்ளனர். அங்கு பானிபூரி, காளான் வாங்கி சாப்பிட்டனர். இந்நிலையில், நேற்று காலையில் அனைவருக்கும் வாந்தி, மயக்கம், தொடர் வயிற்றுபோக்கு ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது. இதை தொடர்ந்து உடனடியாக அவர்கள் கோவை அரசு மருத்துவமனையில் சேர்க்கப்பட்டனர். மருத்துவமனையில் 7 பேருக்கும் சிகிச்சை அளிக்கப்பட்டு வருகிறது.

பாக்கெட்டில் விற்பனை செய்யும் ரெடிமேடு உணவு பொருட்களுக்கு தடை விதிக்க கோரிக்கை



கோவை, மார்ச் 31:
கோவை மாவட்ட கலெக்டர் அலுவலகத்தில் மக்கள் குறைதீர்க்கும் கூட்டம் கலெக்டர் அர்ச்சனா பட்நாயக் தலைமையில் நேற்று நடந்தது. இதில் சமூக விழிப்புணர்வு இயக்கத்தின் நிறுவனர் சாக்ரடீஸ் தலைமையில் அதன் நிர்வாகிகள் மனு அளித்தனர். அம்மனுவில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளதாவது:
கடைகளில் ரெடிமேடு சப்பாத்தி, பரோட்டா, பூரி போன்ற உணவுப் பொருட்கள் கவர்ச்சிகரமான வண்ண பாக்கெட்டுகளில் அடைக்கப்பட்டு விற்பனை செய்யப்படுகிறது.
இந்த உணவுப் பொருட்கள் கெட்டுப்போகாமல் இருக்க பென்சாயிக் ஆசிட் உள்ளிட்ட வேதிப்பொருட்கள் சேர்க்கப்படுகிறது. இந்த வேதிப் பொருட்கள் 0.60 சதவிதம் மட்டும் சேர்க்க வேண்டும். ஆனால் இந்த வேதிப் பொருட்கள் 20 சதவீதம் அதிகமாக சேர்க்கப்படுகிறது. இது பொதுமக்களின் உடல் நலத்திற்கு தீங்கானது. எனவே உணவு பொருட்களை ரெடி மேடாக தயாரித்து பாக்கெட்டில் விற்பனை செய்ய தமிழக அரசு தடைவிதிக்க வேண்டும்.
இவ்வாறு அம்மனுவில் கூறப்பட்டுள்ளது.

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