Food safety knowledge and practice of abattoir and butcher shop workers: a health risk management perspective

Title
Food safety knowledge and practice of abattoir and butcher shop workers: a health risk management perspective
Publication Date
2022
Author(s)
Gebeyehu, Daniel Teshome
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3325-4571
Email: dgebeye3@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:dgebeye3
Tsegaye, Habtam
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd
Place of publication
United Kingdom
DOI
10.1186/s42522-022-00070-1
UNE publication id
une:1959.11/60229
Abstract

Background: Meat is rich in essential proteins and valuable nutrients for human health. Despite these benefts, it is a favorable medium for microbial growth and transmission to humans unless recommended safety procedures are followed. This research aimed to assess the level of knowledge and practice of the abattoir and butcher shop workers who were working in the meat value chain.

Methods: The cross-sectional study design, using structured questionnaire interviews was used to assess the knowledge and practice of abattoir and butcher shop workers. A total of 226 randomly selected workers were participated in this study and bivariate logistic regression was used for data analysis.

Results: Of 226 total participants, 46% were abattoir workers and 54% were butcher shop workers. Majority (88.9%) of the participants did not know about meat safety and 74.3% of the participants had insufcient practices. The cumulative knowledge of both abattoir and butcher shop workers was signifcantly associated (p=0.001) with their knowledge of the presence of diseases causing agents in meat, the source of meat contamination, and the common critical points of meat contamination along the meat value chain. The cumulative practice of abattoir workers was signifcantly associated with their practices on daily meat transporting vehicle washing (p=0.007), reducing meat contamination (p=0.001), duration of animal fasting before slaughter (p=0.039), cleaning of the animal body before slaughter (p=0.002), cleaning material used in the abattoir (p=0.003), disposal of abattoir waste (p=0.002), and type of biosecurity measures used (p=0.013). Similarly, the cumulative practice of butcher shop workers was associated (p=0.001) with their practices of attracting customers, storing remaining meat from daily sales, and measures on contaminated food. Employment of the participants was signifcantly associated with both the cumulative knowledge (p=0.007) and practice (p=0.001) of the participants while the age of the participants was associated (p=0.001) with only their cumulative practices.

Conclusions: In general, the participants' food safety knowledge and practice were unsatisfactory. As a result, the integrated food safety policy formulation in a One Health framework, and collaborative awareness creation among diferent food safety stakeholders were recommended.

Link
Citation
One Health Outlook, 4(14), p. 1-14
ISSN
2524-4655
Start page
1
End page
14
Rights
Attribution 4.0 International

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