Kassa Hailu, Silverman Gary S, Baroudi Karim
Department of Public and Allied Health, Bowling Green State University, Bowling Green Ohio, 43403.
Environ Health Insights. 2010 May 6;4:13-20. doi: 10.4137/ehi.s4717.
Food safety is an important public health issue in the U.S. Eating at restaurants and other food service facilities increasingly has been associated with food borne disease outbreaks. Food safety training and certification of food mangers has been used as a method for reducing food safety violations at food service facilities. However, the literature is inconclusive about the effectiveness of such training programs for improving food safety and protecting consumer health. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of food manger training on reducing food safety violations. We examined food inspection reports from the Toledo/Lucas County Health Department (Ohio) from March 2005 through February 2006 and compared food hygiene violations between food service facilities with certified and without certified food managers. We also examined the impact on food safety of a food service facility being part of a larger group of facilities.Restaurants with trained and certified food managers had significantly fewer critical food safety violations but more non-critical violations than restaurants without certified personnel. Institutional food service facilities had significantly fewer violations than restaurants, and the number of violations did not differ as a function of certification. Similarly, restaurants with many outlets had significantly fewer violations than restaurants with fewer outlets, and training was not associated with lower numbers of violations from restaurants with many outlets. The value of having certified personnel was only observed in independent restaurants and those with few branches. This information may be useful in indicating where food safety problems are most likely to occur. Furthermore, we recommend that those characteristics of institutional and chain restaurants that result in fewer violations should be identified in future research, and efforts made to apply this knowledge at the level of individual restaurants.
食品安全是美国一个重要的公共卫生问题。在餐馆及其他食品服务机构就餐与食源性疾病暴发的关联日益增加。食品管理人员的食品安全培训和认证已被用作减少食品服务机构食品安全违规行为的一种方法。然而,关于此类培训项目在改善食品安全和保护消费者健康方面的有效性,文献尚无定论。本研究的目的是检验食品管理人员培训对减少食品安全违规行为的效果。我们查阅了托莱多/卢卡斯县卫生局(俄亥俄州)2005年3月至2006年2月的食品检查报告,并比较了有认证食品管理人员和无认证食品管理人员的食品服务机构之间的食品卫生违规情况。我们还研究了食品服务机构作为较大机构群体一部分对食品安全的影响。有经过培训和认证的食品管理人员的餐馆,其严重食品安全违规行为显著少于没有认证人员的餐馆,但非严重违规行为更多。机构食品服务机构的违规行为显著少于餐馆,且违规数量不因认证情况而有所不同。同样,分店多的餐馆违规行为显著少于分店少的餐馆,培训与分店多的餐馆违规数量减少无关。有认证人员的价值仅在独立餐馆和分店少的餐馆中体现。这些信息可能有助于指出食品安全问题最可能出现的地方。此外,我们建议在未来的研究中应确定机构餐馆和连锁餐馆那些导致违规行为较少的特征,并努力将这些知识应用到个体餐馆层面。