Chatzimpyrou Olympia, Chaidoutis Elias, Keramydas Dimitrios, Papalexis Petros, Thomaidis Nikolaos S, Pitiriga Vassiliki C, Langi Panagiota, Koutsiari Foteini, Drikos Ioannis, Giannari Maria, Chelidonis Georgios, Lazaris Andreas Ch, Kavantzas Nikolaos
1st Department of Pathology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 75, Mikras Asias Str., Goudi, 11527 Athens, Greece; Master's Program "Environment and Health, Management of Environmental Health Effects", Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 75, Mikras Asias Str., Goudi, 11527 Athens, Greece.
1st Department of Pathology, Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 75, Mikras Asias Str., Goudi, 11527 Athens, Greece; Master's Program "Environment and Health, Management of Environmental Health Effects", Medical School, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 75, Mikras Asias Str., Goudi, 11527 Athens, Greece.
J Food Prot. 2025 Feb 3;88(2):100452. doi: 10.1016/j.jfp.2025.100452. Epub 2025 Jan 9.
Ensuring food safety is a fundamental priority for public health. The catering sector has become prominent as a convenient and cost-effective method of food supply worldwide. Adherence to proper food hygiene practices is crucial for preventing foodborne diseases. The inspection of food items is a key component of internal controls that enables the identification of non-compliance with food hygiene standards. The present study aims to assess Attica restaurant businesses' compliance with international food hygiene standards (FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius) and European legislation on unsafe food.
From January to July 2023, 74 randomly selected restaurants of small, medium, and large capacity in Attica were examined through inspections in terms of compliance for food hygiene standards. The inspections were based on (a) the completion of forms and (b) the collection of water and food samples for laboratory microbiological analysis. Data were collected using a predefined form, referencing the manual of Codex Alimentarius regarding food hygiene standards (CAC/RCP 1-1969/CAC/RCP 39-1993). Additionally, the assessment included the identification of unsafe food placement in accordance with Regulation EC/178/2002 on food safety, as well as Greek national legislation (European Commission, 2002; Hellenic Republic, 2006, 2014).
The highest non-compliance rates are in "adequacy of facilities" (14.12%), "equipment maintenance and sanitization" (12.30%), "pest control" (12.45%), "personal hygiene" (7.58%), and "efficient separation of raw materials" (9.76%). Non-compliance rates for other food hygiene parameters (cooking practices, meal apportionment, storage, transport, reheating, etc.) were considerably lower. The inspection results showed that medium-sized restaurant businesses present the highest rate (56.41%) of total non-compliance compared to large-sized businesses (29.68%) and small-sized businesses (13.91%).
This study demonstrates that restaurant businesses generally adhere to food hygiene and safety standards at a satisfactory level. There is a need for restaurant operators to prioritize enhancing compliance, particularly in addressing critical issues that could potentially result in outbreaks of foodborne diseases.
确保食品安全是公共卫生的根本优先事项。餐饮行业已成为全球一种方便且经济高效的食品供应方式。遵守适当的食品卫生规范对于预防食源性疾病至关重要。食品检查是内部控制的关键组成部分,能够识别不符合食品卫生标准的情况。本研究旨在评估阿提卡地区餐厅企业对国际食品卫生标准(粮农组织/世卫组织食品法典)和欧洲关于不安全食品的法规的遵守情况。
2023年1月至7月,通过检查对阿提卡地区74家随机挑选的小、中、大型餐厅的食品卫生标准合规情况进行了调查。检查基于(a)表格填写以及(b)采集水和食品样本进行实验室微生物分析。数据收集使用预定义表格,参考了食品法典关于食品卫生标准的手册(CAC/RCP 1 - 1969/CAC/RCP 39 - 1993)。此外,评估还包括根据欧盟关于食品安全的第EC/178/2002号法规以及希腊国家立法(欧盟委员会,2002年;希腊共和国,2006年、2014年)识别不安全食品的摆放情况。
不合规率最高的方面是“设施充足性”(14.12%)、“设备维护与消毒”(12.30%)、“虫害控制”(12.45%)、“个人卫生”(7.58%)以及“原材料有效分隔”(9.76%)。其他食品卫生参数(烹饪操作、餐食分配、储存、运输、再加热等)的不合规率则低得多。检查结果表明,中型餐厅企业的总体不合规率最高(56.41%),相比之下大型企业为(29.68%),小型企业为(13.91%)。
本研究表明,餐厅企业总体上对食品卫生和安全标准的遵守程度令人满意。餐厅经营者有必要优先提高合规性,特别是在解决可能导致食源性疾病爆发的关键问题方面。