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Food safety from consumer perspective: health safety
Author(s) -
Jozef Golian,
Ľudmila Nagyová,
Alexandra Andocsová,
Peter Zajác,
Jozef Palkovič
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
potravinarstvo slovak journal of food sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.259
H-Index - 12
eISSN - 1338-0230
pISSN - 1337-0960
DOI - 10.5219/917
Subject(s) - food safety , environmental health , test (biology) , hygiene , business , agriculture , personal hygiene , marketing , sample (material) , medicine , geography , biology , paleontology , chemistry , archaeology , family medicine , pathology , chromatography
Food industry along with agriculture constitute a major economy sector in most countries, because in addition to water intake and oxygen availability, food is another basic determinant for functioning of the human organism. For the proper functioning of human body, it is imperative that the customer chooses food so that the daily diet includes all the necessary nutrients in a reasonable proportion. At present, however, it is becoming more and more common that foodstuffs do not meet strict standards, are not properly stored, the packaging is damaged, or hygiene standards are not being adhered to, and therefore, in addition to health benefiting substances, they also contain harmful ones. According to the World Health Organization, the death of up to 2 million people a year around the world is caused by foods harmful to human health. The main objective of this report was to assess how consumers perceive the health safety of food in Slovakia and to find out whether some types of food are considered as potentially harmful to health. Primary data were obtained through a questionnaire survey conducted from October to December 2017 on a sample of 478 respondents. Respondents answered to 12 factual, and 9 classification questions, which were consequently analyzed using the Friedman test, Nemenyi test and Chi-Square test of Independence. Survey results showed that the majority of respondents had concerns about the health harming effects of food only occasionally and they trust the hygienic level of the restaurant facilities (60.5%), fast food (53%) and frozen food (49.2%) with few reservations. As the most hazardous foods are considered poultry meat, eggs and mayonnaise. If the consumer's health is endangered by food, the guilty party should be punished by ban (61.9%) or by suspension (19.5%).

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