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Enhance Protection and Safety of the Nations Agricultural and Food Supply
Arizona's Statewide Food Safety Program
Impact Nugget
More than 2000 low income families annually have attended EFNEP classes
in Arizona. Of these, 93 percent have made positive changes in their
food behaviors, and 52 percent improved safe food practices, according
to follow-up surveys.
Issue
Foodborne illness and related deaths continue to occur in Arizona. The
Arizona Department of Health Services reported more than 2307 cases
in 2002. The Centers for Disease Control estimate that only 10 percent
of all cases are even reported. The 2000 FDA report on food safety stated
that between 6.5 and 8.1 million cases of foodborne illness and as many
as 5000 related deaths occur each year in the United States. Experts
believe that the risk of foodborne illness is increasing due to changes
in the food supply system; an increase in group feeding; an increase
in the number of people at greatest risk of foodborne illness- elderly,
children and people with suppressed immune systems; changes in pathogens
and new resistant strains; and new modes of transmission of pathogens.
An interdisciplinary, research-based approach to education is needed
on the issues affecting the safety and quality of the food supply from
the farm to the table.
What has been done?
Safe Food 2010 is a multi-year project focusing on education in food
safety with the general public, school food service staffs, group home
staffs, food banks and other community groups. The ultimate goal is
to reduce foodborne illness in Arizona and to increase safe food handling
practices, from the field to the consumer's plate. The program uses
a broad array of both written information and workshops delivered in
several counties in Arizona.
Workshops include Master Consumer Adviser volunteer training, food
safety education classes, EFNEP (Extension Food and Nutrition Education
Program) classes, Safe Food Handling for the Occasional Quantity Cook,
and a biennial Food Safety from the Farm to the Table Conference. Information
services include 800-number food safety hotlines, weekly news columns
on food safety in a Phoenix area newspaper, and Safe Food Weeks, when
food safety information packets are delivered to print and broadcast
media for dissemination to the public.
Impact
More than 2000 low income families annually have attended EFNEP classes
in Arizona. Of these, 93 percent have made positive changes in their
food behaviors, and 52 percent improved safe food practices, according
to follow-up surveys. Safe food practices result in reduced medical
costs and fewer lost work days. Similar results occurred with school
and institutional food service staffs. In a six-month follow-up survey
with participants, 95 percent reported improvement in at least one safe
food practice due to the training, with a 30 percent increase in safe
food practices. These changes affected more than 200,000 children or
at-risk adults. As the program spreads, the total potential number of
elementary students affected by food lunch practices in Arizona would
be more than 562,000 children. Food service personnel are constantly
changing, so ongoing education is critical. Extension volunteers and
staff have trained more than 300 community quantity cooks in safety
practices. Master Consumer Advisors in Phoenix and Tucson answered 5,000
consumer questions over the phone in 2003. Reported cases of foodborne
illness in Arizona declined from 5200 in 1995 to 2307 in 2002, even
with much better reporting.
Safe Food 2010 conference participants reported sharing the information
with 5400 additional people. Conference feedback: survey data from previous
Safe Food Conferences showed that 84 percent had used the Safe Food
conference information and materials at work or home; 84 percent said
the conference helped them update their current job skills; 46 percent
shared information with people they taught or trained.
Funding
University of Arizona Cooperative Extension
Staff time: Maricopa, La Paz and Yavapai County Department of Environmental
Health,
Arizona Department of Health Services Arizona Department of Agriculture
USDA-CSREES,
Industry supporters
Staff time: Food banks, restaurant industry, Intertribal Council, NW
Food Processors Association, Intertribal Council, local grocery representatives,
Arizona Beef Council, Arizona Gleaning, parish ministry and social service
organizations
Contact
Sharon Hoelscher-Day, extension educator, Maricopa County coordinator,
community health
University of Arizona, Maricopa County Cooperative Extension
4341 E. Broadway, Phoenix, AZ 85040-8807
Telephone: (602) 470-8086 FAX: (602) 470-8092
Email: shday@ag.arizona.edu
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