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Street food handlers' food safety knowledge, attitudes and self-reported practices and consumers' perceptions about street food vending in Maseru, Lesotho

PurposeFood safety knowledge and hygienic practices by food handlers play an important role in the prevention of contamination of food prepared.Design/methodology/approachThis descriptive survey was conducted in Maseru around the taxi ranks amongst 48 food handlers and 93 consumers using a semi-stru...

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Published in:British food journal (1966) 2021-12, Vol.123 (13), p.302-316
Main Authors: Letuka, Ponts'o, Nkhebenyane, Jane, Thekisoe, Oriel
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c353t-1a629d9e09c270b93276f24969c698ebe65d71a90dc2ee8662a838baa00223cf3
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container_issue 13
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container_title British food journal (1966)
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creator Letuka, Ponts'o
Nkhebenyane, Jane
Thekisoe, Oriel
description PurposeFood safety knowledge and hygienic practices by food handlers play an important role in the prevention of contamination of food prepared.Design/methodology/approachThis descriptive survey was conducted in Maseru around the taxi ranks amongst 48 food handlers and 93 consumers using a semi-structured questionnaire for assessing food handler knowledge, attitudes and practices, open-ended questionnaire for obtaining consumer perceptions and observation checklist.FindingsMajority of the food handlers were females (60%) and males constituted only (40%). The mean age was 35.5 ± 10.3 and 28.2 ± 9.9 respectively for street vendors and consumers. There was a statistically significant difference in knowledge among the trained and untrained vendors (p = 0040). On average the vendor population that participated in this study was considered to have poor knowledge (scores < 50%) of food safety since they scored 49% ± 11, while 84% of the respondents were considered to have positive attitudes towards food safety. Only 6% of the consumers reported that they never buy street vended foods mainly due to the hygiene issues. The observation checklist showed that the vendors operated under unhygienic conditions and that there was scarcity of clean water supply and hand washing facilities.Originality/valueThis study provides knowledge that was previously unknown about food vending in Lesotho. It has significantly added to the body of knowledge on food safety in Lesotho which can be used to modify policies and structure food safety training for people involved in the informal trade.
doi_str_mv 10.1108/BFJ-07-2020-0595
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source ABI/INFORM global; Emerald:Jisc Collections:Emerald Subject Collections HE and FE 2024-2026:Emerald Premier (reading list)
subjects Attitudes
Check lists
Consumers
Consumption
Demographics
Food contamination
Food contamination & poisoning
Food handling
Food safety
Handlers
Hygiene
Knowledge
Pollution prevention
Questionnaires
Safety
Safety training
Self report
Statistical analysis
Vendors
Water scarcity
Water supply
title Street food handlers' food safety knowledge, attitudes and self-reported practices and consumers' perceptions about street food vending in Maseru, Lesotho
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