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Complex Food Chain Increases Food Safety Risks

Tuesday 31 March, 2015

On World Health Day 2015, WHO/Europe estimates that levels of foodborne disease are much higher than currently reported and underlines the need for improved collaboration among sectors to lower the health risks associated with unsafe food.

Our food chain is longer and more complex than ever before, and demographic, cultural, economic and environmental developments – globalized trade, travel and migration, an ageing population, changing consumer trends and habits, new technologies, emergencies, climate change and extreme weather events – are increasing foodborne health risks.

"The fact that we significantly underestimate how many people become ill from chemicals in the food chain and from common microorganisms such as Salmonellaand Campylobacter should start alarm bells ringing across the many areas with a stake in our food chain. A failure in food safety at any link in this chain, from the environment, through primary production, processing, transport, trade, catering or in the home, can have significant health and economic consequences," says Dr Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO Regional Director for Europe.

Current surveillance and reporting systems across the WHO European Region are limited and detect only a small fraction of cases. This underreporting is greater in countries with less advanced laboratory capacities and less developed surveillance systems. Better data are needed to respond effectively to risks.

"Health 2020, the European policy for health and well-being, calls for effective communication, information sharing and joint action domestically and internationally between the public health, animal health and agricultural sectors. This will go a long way towards ensuring safer food on our plates," adds Dr Jakab.

Challenges to food safety

WHO calls on policy-makers

World Health Day 2015: food safety

World Health Day 2015, celebrated on 7 April, is an opportunity to recognize the important food safety role of all those involved in food production, and to strengthen collaboration and coordination among these various areas, in order to prevent, detect and respond to foodborne diseases efficiently and cost-effectively. A kaleidoscope of events is planned across the globe.

People are also invited to engage through social media and to promote "From farm to plate: make food safe" using the hashtag #safefood. Experts from European organizations will be online during a Twitter chat on 7 April 2015, #safefoodchat, from 14:00–15:00 CEST to answer questions and to provide food safety advice.

Global burden of foodborne diseases

In 2006, WHO established the Foodborne Diseases Burden Epidemiology Reference Group to estimate the global burden and to provide Member States with data and tools to support policy-makers and other stakeholders in setting appropriate and evidence-informed priorities of food safety at the country level. The final report of the Group, composed of internationally renowned experts in a broad range of disciplines relevant to global foodborne disease epidemiology, will be published in October 2015.

-Ends-

Links

World Health Day 2015: Food safety
www.euro.who.int/whd2015

Factsheet: Food safety
http://www.euro.who.int/en/about-us/whd/world-health-day-2015/multimedia/fact-sheet-food-safety-in-the-who-european-region

Infographic: Salmonella in Europe
http://www.euro.who.int/ru/about-us/whd/world-health-day-2015/multimedia/infographic-salmonella-in-europe-reduce-food-safety-risk-through-shared-responsibility

Estimation of the global burden of foodborne diseaseshttp://www.who.int/foodsafety/areas_work/foodborne-diseases/ferg/en/

For further information, contact:

Stephanie Brickman
Communications Consultant
WHO Regional Office for Europe
United Nations City, Marmorvej 51
2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
Tel.: +45 45336844,
+45 40 87 48 76 (mobile)
E-mail: sbr@euro.who.int

Hilde Kruse
Programme Manager, Food Safety
Division of Communicable Diseases, Health Security and Environment
WHO Regional Office for Europe
United Nations City, Marmorvej 51
2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark
Tel.: +45 45336754,
+45 29 44 05 06 (mobile)
E-mail: hik@euro.who.int



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