Article | REF: F1118 V1

Sustainable food safety culture

Authors: Christine DECANIS, Anne-Gaëlle MELLOUËT

Publication date: September 10, 2021, Review date: July 19, 2022

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


Overview

Français

ABSTRACT

The Codex Alimentarius, the Regulation and the Food Safety Management Systems  standards encourage food companies to deploy a positive Food Safety Culture. This article proposes to appropriate this approach by contextualizing its genesis and the different components on which it will be based in order to propose to companies a methodology to implement and promote this new approach to food safety management.

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHORS

  • Christine DECANIS: Food safety management system project manager CTCPA, Site Agroparc, Avignon, France

  • Anne-Gaëlle MELLOUËT: Director, Mission d'Intérêt Général CTCPA, Site Agroparc, Avignon, France

 INTRODUCTION

Since the 1950s, the agri-food industry has put in place a range of tools to ensure that products are marketed with optimum sanitary quality: incoming inspection of raw materials, in-process and finished product inspections, supplier audits, HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point), good hygiene practices, increasingly effective traceability systems, and so on.

For these tools to be effective, and for food safety to be sustainable, it must be an integral part of corporate policy. The GFSI (Global Food Safety Initiative) working group goes one step further, adding a human dimension and talking about a food safety culture, commonly referred to as "Food Safety Culture" (FSC). This concept, initially developed in Anglo-Saxon countries, is still too little used in French companies.

The GFSI's position on the subject, and the requirements of the various private Food Safety Management Systems (FSMS) standards (IFS Food and BRC Food), now require manufacturers to assess their level of maturity, in order to identify and implement actions to develop and improve their food safety culture.

This article presents the history of Food Safety Culture, the pillars on which it is built, and proposes a methodology for companies to implement and promote this new managerial approach.

At the end of the article, readers will find a glossary and a table of acronyms.

You do not have access to this resource.

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource.
Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed? Log in!


The Ultimate Scientific and Technical Reference

A Comprehensive Knowledge Base, with over 1,200 authors and 100 scientific advisors
+ More than 10,000 articles and 1,000 how-to sheets, over 800 new or updated articles every year
From design to prototyping, right through to industrialization, the reference for securing the development of your industrial projects

KEYWORDS

management   |   food safety   |   culture


This article is included in

Food industry

This offer includes:

Knowledge Base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

Practical Path

Operational and didactic, to guarantee the acquisition of transversal skills

Doc & Quiz

Interactive articles with quizzes, for constructive reading

Subscribe now!

Ongoing reading
Sustainable food safety culture