1.Food Ingestion Factors of the Korean Exposure Factors Handbook.
Jae Yeon JANG ; Soo Nam JO ; Sun Ja KIM ; Hyung Nam MYUNG ; Cho Il KIM
Journal of Preventive Medicine and Public Health 2014;47(1):18-26
The purpose of this study was to establish food ingestion factors needed to assess exposure to contaminants through food ingestion. The study reclassified the raw data of the Korean National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey in 2001 into 12 subcategories including grain products, meat products, fish and shellfish, and vegetables for international comparability of exposure evaluation. The criteria for food intake calculation were unified according to the characteristics of food groups, and recommended values for food ingestion factors were calculated through moisture correction and recategorization of cooked, processed, and mixed foods for each group. The average intake rate for grain and grain products was 6.25 g/kg-d per capita and the men's intake rate was approximately 8% higher than that of the women. The average intake rate of meat and meat products was 1.62 g/kg-d per capita and the men's intake rate was 30% higher than that of the women, on average. The average intake rate of fish and shellfish was 1.53 g/kg-d per capita, and the age groups of 1 to 2 and 3 to 6 recorded higher capita intake rates than other age groups, 2.62 g/kg-d and 2.25 g/kg-d, respectively. The average intake rate of vegetables was 6.47 g/kg-d per capita, with the age group of 1 to 2 recording the highest per capita intake rate of 9.79 g/kg-d and that of 13 to 19 recording the lowest mean. The study also offers recommended values for food ingestion factors of other food groups by gender, age, and region. The food ingestion exposure factors will need future updates in consideration of ongoing changes in food consumption behavior.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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*Eating
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*Environmental Exposure
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Humans
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Meat/analysis/standards
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Nutrition Surveys
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Republic of Korea
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Risk Assessment
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Seafood/analysis/standards
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Vegetables/standards
2.Experimental study of non-traumatic ultrasonic testing for pork quality.
Xiaoliang HU ; Baolin LIU ; Guoyan ZHOU
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2011;28(4):819-822
We carried out experiments with B-scan technology, computer image processing technology and statistical analysis, to extract feature parameters from histogram of different organizations in order to establish prediction methods of the meat quality of pigs. We then Explored and solved the assessment problems of intramuscular fat (IMF) content, to provide reference standards of using ultrasound for the classification of pork.
Adipose Tissue
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diagnostic imaging
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Animals
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Meat
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analysis
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standards
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Muscle, Skeletal
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chemistry
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diagnostic imaging
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Quality Control
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Swine
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Ultrasonography
3.BSE situation and establishment of Food Safety Commission in Japan.
Takashi ONODERA ; Chi Kyeong KIM
Journal of Veterinary Science 2006;7(1):1-11
Eight major policies were implemented by Japanese Government since Oct. 2001, to deal with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE). These are; 1) Surveillance in farm by veterinarian, 2) Prion test at healthy 1.3mi cows/yr, by veterinarian, 3) Elimination of specified risk material (SRM), 4) Ban of MBM for production, sale use, 5) Prion test for fallen stocks, 6) Transparent information and traceability, 7) New Measures such as Food Safety Basic Law, and 8) Establish of Food Safety Commission in the Cabinet Office. At this moment, the extent of SRM risk has only been indicated by several reports employing tests with a limited sensitivity. There is still a possibility that the items in the SRM list will increase in the future, and this indiscriminately applies to Japanese cattle as well. Although current practices of SRM elimination partially guarantee total food safety, additional latent problems and imminent issues remain as potential headaches to be addressed. If the index of SRM elimination cannot guarantee reliable food safety, we have but to resort to total elimination of tissues from high risk-bearing and BSE-infected animals. However, current BSE tests have their limitations and can not yet completely detect highrisk and/or infected animals. Under such circumstances, tissues/wastes and remains of diseased, affected fallen stocks and cohort animals have to be eliminated to prevent BSE invading the human food chain systems. The failure to detect any cohort should never be allowed to occur, and with regular and persistent updating of available stringent records, we are at least adopting the correct and useful approach as a reawakening strategy to securing food safety. In this perspective, traceability based on a National Identification System is required.
Animal Feed/*standards
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Animals
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Cattle
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Consumer Product Safety/*legislation&jurisprudence
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Encephalopathy, Bovine Spongiform/epidemiology/*prevention&control
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Female
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Food Chain
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Japan/epidemiology
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Meat/*standards
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Risk Assessment
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Risk Management
4.Systematic study of the quality and safety of chilled pork from wet markets, supermarkets, and online markets in China.
Dong-Wen HU ; Chen-Xing LIU ; Hong-Bo ZHAO ; Da-Xi REN ; Xiao-Dong ZHENG ; Wei CHEN
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2019;20(1):95-104
BACKGROUND:
With increasing media coverage of food safety incidents, such as that of clenbuterol residues in pork, food safety has become a major public health concern in China. Rapidly developing online markets attract increasing numbers of Chinese consumers to purchase food on the Internet. However, the quality and safety of food sold online are uncertain and are less reported on.
OBJECTIVE:
This research aimed to systematically study the quality and safety of chilled pork from wet markets, supermarkets, and online markets in China.
RESULTS:
The chilled pork samples from online markets were fresher than those from wet markets and supermarkets based on the surface redness (a* value). Chilled pork contained high levels of nutritional elements, especially the magnesium and phosphorus levels in samples from online markets. The levels of heavy metal element residues and veterinary drug residues in all chilled pork samples were within the standards limits. In addition, huge differences existed in the quality and freshness of the chilled pork samples from online markets according to principal component analysis (PCA).
CONCLUSIONS
Most chilled pork sold in Chinese markets was qualified and safe. It is necessary to establish an effective online market supervision system for chilled pork.
Animals
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China
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Cold Temperature
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Drug Residues/analysis*
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Food Preservation/standards*
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Food Quality
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Food Safety
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Metals, Heavy/analysis*
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Principal Component Analysis
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Red Meat/standards*
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Sus scrofa
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Veterinary Drugs/analysis*
5.Food safety knowledge and practices of abattoir and butchery shops and the microbial profile of meat in Mekelle City, Ethiopia.
Mekonnen HAILESELASSIE ; Habtamu TADDELE ; Kelali ADHANA ; Shewit KALAYOU
Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine 2013;3(5):407-412
OBJECTIVETo assess the food safety knowledge and practices in meat handling, and to determine microbial load and pathogenic organisms in meat at Mekelle city.
METHODSA descriptive survey design was used to answer questions concerning the current status of food hygiene and sanitation practiced in the abattoir and butcher shops. Workers from the abattoir and butcher shops were interviewed through a structured questionnaire to assess their food safety knowledge. Bacterial load was assessed by serial dilution method and the major bacterial pathogens were isolated by using standard procedures.
RESULTS15.4% of the abattoir workers had no health certificate and there was no hot water, sterilizer and cooling facility in the abattoir. 11.3% of the butchers didn't use protective clothes. There was a food safety knowledge gap within the abattoir and butcher shop workers. The mean values of bacterial load of abattoir meat, butcher shops and street meat sale was found to be 1.1×10(5), 5.6×10(5) and 4.3×10(6) cfu/g, respectively. The major bacterial pathogens isolated were Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus cereus.
CONCLUSIONSThe study revealed that there is a reasonable gap on food safety knowledge by abattoir and butcher shop workers. The microbial profile was also higher compared to standards set by World Health Organization. Due attention should be given by the government to improve the food safety knowledge and the quality standard of meat sold in the city.
Abattoirs ; standards ; Colony Count, Microbial ; Ethiopia ; Food Microbiology ; Food Safety ; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ; Health Surveys ; Humans ; Hygiene ; Meat ; microbiology ; Surveys and Questionnaires