Evaluation of Food Safety Education for Consumers

Traditionally, nutrition educators have used a fairly global approach to teach food safety by teaching a broad range of safe food handling behaviors in the expectation that this will lead to the avoidance of foodborne illness. This approach can be confusing and lead to evaluation data that are diffi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of nutrition education 2001-01, Vol.33, p.S27-S34
Hauptverfasser: Medeiros, Lydia, Hillers, Virginia, Kendall, Patricia, Mason, April
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Traditionally, nutrition educators have used a fairly global approach to teach food safety by teaching a broad range of safe food handling behaviors in the expectation that this will lead to the avoidance of foodborne illness. This approach can be confusing and lead to evaluation data that are difficult to interpret. This article suggests that food safety education and evaluation in the future be organized around five behavioral constructs: practice personal hygiene, cook foods adequately, avoid cross-contamination, keep foods at safe temperatures, and avoid food from unsafe sources. These five constructs are derived from data on actual outbreaks and estimated incidences of foodborne illness. Research is needed to establish reliable and valid evaluation measures for these five behavioral constructs. Evaluation instruments can be tailored to fit specific education programs. If evaluation instruments focus on these five behavior areas, the result will be meaningful evaluation data that can be more easily summarized across food safety education programs for consumers.
ISSN:0022-3182
1499-4046
1708-8259
DOI:10.1016/S1499-4046(06)60067-5