Background
Unsafe
food is linked to the deaths of an estimated 2 million people annually –
including many children. Food containing harmful bacteria, viruses, parasites
or chemical substances is responsible for more than 200 diseases, ranging from
diarrhoea to cancers.
New
threats to food safety are constantly emerging. Changes in food production,
distribution and consumption; changes to the environment; new and emerging
pathogens; antimicrobial resistance - all pose challenges to national food
safety systems. Increases in travel and trade enhance the likelihood that
contamination can spread internationally.
The Topic for World
Health Day 2015 is Food Safety
As
our food supply becomes increasingly globalized, the need to strengthen food
safety systems in and between all countries is becoming more and more evident.
That is why the WHO is promoting efforts to improve food safety, from farm to
plate (and everywhere in between) on World Health Day, 7 April 2015.
WHO
helps countries prevent, detect and respond to foodborne disease outbreaks - in
line with the Codex Alimentarius, a collection of international
food standards, guidelines and codes of practice covering all the main foods
and processes. Together with the UN Food and
Agriculture
Organization (FAO), WHO alerts countries to food safety emergencies through an
international information network.
Five Keys To Safer
Food
Food
safety is a shared responsibility. It is important to work all along the food
production chain – from farmers and manufacturers to vendors and consumers. For
example, WHO’s Five keys to safer food offer practical guidance to
vendors and consumers for handling and preparing food:
ü Key 1: Keep clean
ü Key 2: Separate raw
and cooked food
ü Key 3: Cook food
thoroughly
ü Key 4: Keep food at
safe temperatures
ü Key 5: Use safe
water and raw materials.
World
Health Day 2015 is an opportunity to alert people working in different
government sectors, farmers, manufacturers, retailers, health practitioners –
as well as consumers – about the importance of food safety, and the part each
can play in ensuring that everyone can feel confident that the food on their plate
is safe to eat.
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