Department of Food Science, University of Arkansas, System Division of Agriculture, 2650 North Young Avenue, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72704.
Department of Food, Nutrition, and Packaging Sciences, College of Agriculture Forestry, and Packaging Sciences, Clemson University, 206 Poole Agricultural Center, Clemson, South Carolina 29634, USA.
J Food Prot. 2021 Nov 1;84(11):1852-1862. doi: 10.4315/JFP-21-146.
Significant resources, including both human and financial capital, have been dedicated to developing and delivering food handler training programs to meet government and organizational mandates. Even with the plethora of food safety-oriented training programs, there is scant empirical evidence documenting effectiveness, suggesting the need to rethink the design and delivery of food safety training for food handlers. One underlying assumption of most training programs is that food handlers engage in unsafe practices because of lack of knowledge. As a result, many training curricula are designed to improve knowledge, assuming behavior will change as knowledge increases. However, food handlers often return to the work environment and try to implement the new knowledge with minimal success. One explanation for this is that the training context and the implementation context often differ, making it difficult for the food handler to transfer what they learned into practice. Understanding the connection between knowledge, the organization, and its environment is critical to knowledge implementation. The focus of this review is to describe a six-step knowledge-sharing model. Here, knowledge sharing is broadly defined as the process of creating and then using knowledge to change a practice or behavior. Our proposed knowledge-sharing model includes six steps: generation, adaptation, dissemination, reception, adoption, and implementation. We have organized this model into two dyads: (i) transfer between researcher (i.e., knowledge generators) and educator and (ii) transfer between educator and food handler (i.e., knowledge implementers). To put into practice this proposed model for developing and delivering effective food safety training for food handlers, we have provided suggested actions that can be performed within each step of the knowledge-sharing process.
大量资源,包括人力和财力,都被用于开发和提供食品处理人员培训计划,以满足政府和组织的要求。尽管有大量以食品安全为导向的培训计划,但几乎没有实证证据证明其有效性,这表明需要重新思考食品处理人员食品安全培训的设计和实施。大多数培训计划的一个基本假设是,食品处理人员从事不安全的行为是因为缺乏知识。因此,许多培训课程旨在提高知识水平,假设随着知识的增加,行为会发生变化。然而,食品处理人员经常回到工作环境中,并试图以最小的成功实施新的知识。对此的一个解释是,培训环境和实施环境经常不同,使得食品处理人员难以将所学知识转化为实践。理解知识、组织及其环境之间的联系对于知识的实施至关重要。本综述的重点是描述一个六步知识共享模型。在这里,知识共享被广泛定义为创建知识然后使用知识来改变实践或行为的过程。我们提出的知识共享模型包括六个步骤:生成、适应、传播、接收、采用和实施。我们将该模型组织成两个对偶体:(i)研究人员(即知识生成者)和教育者之间的转移,以及(ii)教育者和食品处理人员(即知识执行者)之间的转移。为了将这个拟议的模型付诸实践,为食品处理人员开发和提供有效的食品安全培训,我们提供了在知识共享过程的每个步骤中可以执行的建议行动。