World Food Safety Day: WHO stresses to take unsafe food off the menu

The Food and Agriculture Organization and World Health Organization are joining forces to assist countries to prevent, manage and respond to risks along the food supply chain.

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Prior to first-ever UN World Food Safety Day, World Health Organization (WHO) expressed concern over the unsafe food which kills around 4,20,000 people every year. Children under five are the most at risk, carrying 40 per cent of the food borne disease burden, amounting to 125,000 deaths every year.

"These deaths are entirely preventable", WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. Unsafe food contaminated by bacteria, viruses, parasites or chemical substances  also causes nearly one-in-ten people, or some 600 million, to fall ill globally each year.

"World Food Safety Day is a unique opportunity to raise awareness about the dangers of unsafe food with governments, producers, handlers and consumers", he stated.

Also read: Global Sustainable Food Packaging Market Analysis and Future Growth Trends

Just as food safety contributes to food security - human health, economic prosperity, agriculture, market access, tourism and sustainable development - unsafe food hinders these resources by straining health care systems and harming national economies, tourism, trade and development.

In many low and middle income economies, unsafe food that has caused workers to suffer illness, disability and premature death, costs $95 billion in productivity annually, WHO estimates.

Improving hygiene practices in the food and agricultural  sectors helps to reduce the surfacing and spread of antimicrobial resistance along the food chain and in the environment, the UN explained.

'No food security without food safety'

The theme of this year's first commemoration on Friday is that "food safety is everyone's business".

Cognizant of the urgent need to raise awareness, promote and facilitate actions for global food safety, the General Assembly decided to designate 7 June as World Food Safety Day.

The UN has designated WHO and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to lead efforts in promoting worldwide food safety.

Together they are joining forces to assist countries in preventing, managing and responding to risks along the food supply chain by working with food producers, vendors, regulatory authorities and civil society regardless of whether food is domestically produced or imported.

"Whether you are a farmer, farm supplier, food processor, transporter, marketer or consumer, food safety is your business," said FAO Director-General Jos Graziano da Silva. "There is no food security without food safety".

The UN agencies underline that safe, nutritious and sufficient food is a key to promoting health and ending hunger, which are two of the main aims of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Safe food contributes to a healthy life and its production improves sustainability by enabling market access and productivity, which drives economic development and poverty alleviation, especially in rural areas.

Investing in consumer food safety education can potentially reduce food borne disease and return savings of up to $10 for each dollar invested, according to the UN agencies.

Worldwide activities for World Food Safety Day are aiming to inspire action to help prevent, detect and manage food borne health risks.

"From farm to plate, we all have a role to play in making food safe", concluded the WHO Chief.


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