sharing resources for retail food safety education june 2010

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Sharing Resources for Retail Food Safety Education & Training Brian A. Nummer, Ph.D. 2011

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Sharing Resources for

Retail Food Safety

Education & Training

Brian A. Nummer, Ph.D. 2011

Retail Food Safety Consortium

Communication

EducationResearch

Define the boundaries that exist among retail food safety professionals and identify

areas that could benefit through collaborations

Meet each year to foster partnerships and communication

Develop a formal mechanism to identify research and communicate priorities to

stakeholders

Identify and communicate best “proven” practices to offer to operators

Assess data needed by regulators and industry to promote the cost-benefit of food

safety activities

Promote behavior change as the foundation of all research, outreach, and training

efforts

Collect and review retail food safety resources to maximize use and to avoid

duplication

Create a portal website to improve communications

Improve collaboration between sanitarians and non-regulatory food safety

professionals

Share non-English language materials nation-wide.

Roundtable 2006 Recommendations

1. Enhance collaborations between

retail food safety professionals and

their associations

2. Identify and scientifically validate

retail food safety “best” practices

3. Collect, develop, review, and

disseminate retail food safety

resources

4. Identify and prioritize retail food

safety needs

• Consortium Roundtables at Association

Annual Meetings

Enhance Collaborations

2008

Tucson AZ

2009

Chicago

2010

Anaheim, CA

Outputs – NEHA Annual

Meeting 2008 Tucson, AZ

• (p 16) Assessing Food

Safety Training Needs of

Environmental Health

Specialists in the U.S.:

Focus Group Summary

• (p 18) Surveying the

Food Safety Training

Needs of Environmental

Health Specialists in the

U.S.

Volume 72 No. 8 April 2010

2009 AFDO Annual

Meeting RoundtableFood safety professionals face increasing challenges due to shrinking budgets, international

trade, new technologies, emerging pathogens, and changing consumer demands. AFDO has

joined together with NEHA, IAFP along with Arkansas, Clemson, Purdue, Rutgers and Utah State

Universities to form the Retail Food Safety Consortium (RFSC).

Angela M. Fraser, Ph.D., Associate Professor/Food Safety Specialist, Dept of Food Sci & Human Nutrition

Brian A. Nummer, Ph.D., Extension Food Safety Specialist and Director, Retail Food Safety Consortium, Utah State University

John Marcy, Ph.D., Professor and Poultry Processing Specialist, Center of Excellence for Poultry Science, University of Arkansas

Fred Reimers, Food Safety Consultant, Creative FoodSafe Solutions (IAFP Retail Representative)

Dr. Richard H. Linton, Professor of Food Safety and Director of the Center for Food Safety Engineering, Purdue University

Charlene W. Bruce, Director, Food Protection Division, Mississippi Department of Health

Ron Klein, Present-Elect, AFDO and Program Manager, Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation

Enhance Collaborations

2010 IAFP Annual Meeting Research

Needs in Retail Food Safety Roundtable

Aug 2, 2010 Monday Morning

Larry Kohl, Jennifer Quinlan, Kevin Smith, Ann Marie Mc

Namara, Don Schaffner, and Brian Nummer

1. Enhance collaborations between retail food safety professionals and their associations

2. Identify and scientifically validate retail food safety “best” practices

3. Collect, develop, review, and disseminate retail food safety resources

4. Identify and prioritize retail food safety needs

◦ Thawing at 135ºF (as part of cooking process)

◦ J. Food Control 20:706-708

◦ Wet cooking gourmet (thick) hamburgers

◦ J. Food Science (Accepted – in print)

◦ Ethnic food processes (tacos al Pastor)

◦ Reduced Oxygen Packaging

◦ Conf. Food Protection Committee 2010-12

◦ USU ROP Online Course in development

◦ Various Salmonella challenge studies

Best Practices Research

Best Practices Research

1. Enhance collaborations between

retail food safety professionals and

their associations

2. Identify and scientifically validate

retail food safety “best” practices

3. Collect, develop, review, and

disseminate retail food safety

resources

4. Identify and prioritize retail food

safety needs

ED

ITA

BL

ED

oc

um

en

ts

Resources

Collect &

Develop

• Factsheets

• Guides

• “How to’s”

• Best practices

• Training

• HACCP templates

ReviewConsortium and NEHA, IAFP, AFDO

volunteers (you)

Disseminate

Consortium & partner websites● Copyright-free

● Customizable & editable

● Language translations

Most downloaded resources

• Spanish – Puerto Rico

Translation (Puerto Rico

Dept Health) ~ 500

downloads

• Spanish – Mexican

dialect translation

(Maricopa County DH) ~

400 downloads

PHOTOS

Contribut

e to our

collectio

n

Buy-in (motivators)Sometimes photos have impactanyone know what these are?

Sometimes photos have impact

Spinach + E. coli -- Guess his prognosis?

1. Enhance collaborations between

retail food safety professionals and

their associations

2. Identify and scientifically validate

retail food safety “best” practices

3. Collect, develop, review, and

disseminate retail food safety

resources

4. Identify and prioritize retail food

safety needs

2010 IAFP Annual Meeting Research

Needs in Retail Food Safety Roundtable

Aug 2, 2010 Monday Morning

Larry Kohl, Jennifer Quinlan, Kevin Smith, Ann Marie Mc

Namara, Don Schaffner, and Brian Nummer

Brian A. Nummer,

Ph.D.

Angela Fraser,

Ph.D.

Donald Schaffner,

Ph.D.

Richard Linton,

Ph.D.

John Marcy, Ph.D.Association participants:

AFDO, NEHA, IAFP

Government participants: FDA (CFSAN), CDC

Industry participants: Johnson Diversey, Kroger, Tyson Foods, Ecolab, +more

Local and state Health Departments were represented via AFDO and NEHA