In today?s globalized world, food safety capacities need to be strengthened everywhere to enable more rational and effective controls in all countries. The main objective of this project is to contribute to the strengthening of national food control systems through provision of authoritative and practical guidance, training materials and capacity development activities in a number of selected countries. The proposed approach is based on two complementary pillars, each comprised of activities at global, and regional/country levels. Pillar 1 deals with the strengthening of risk-based food controls through increased application of the risk analysis framework with an emphasis on risk assessment as the basis for food safety regulation and on risk-based programming of regulatory activities, in particular, risk-based inspections. Risk-based approaches to food control help minimizing exposure to food hazards, while making more efficient use of the available resources, that may be scarce for many developing or transition countries. To move from reactive towards preventive food control systems, food safety professionals must be enabled to find, generate and utilize relevant data. Newly developed tools, based on proven approaches used in a range of contexts, will be used to guide assessment, option evaluation and strategic improvement of risk-based controls. Under the second Pillar, selected food control systems will be assessed using the recently developed FAO/WHO assessment Tool. Stakeholder participatory advocacy workshops will be conducted to achieve high-level commitment to improving food control while priority capacity building activities will be undertaken according to established targets. By providing support to implement the assessment of national food control systems, this project will identify food safety capacity needs to be strengthened to enable more rational and effective controls in all countries. A pool of assessors will also be created by training food safety specialists in facilitating the food control system assessment process through sound methodologies. All regional/country activities will be carefully designed to confirm preliminary assessments, and secure relevant partnerships with national counterparts and effective planning/implementation of specific activities.

Public Health Relevance

The main objective of this project is to implement a complementary set of capacity building actions in a number of selected countries focused on risk-based practices and overall comprehensive assessments of food control systems to improve national food control frameworks. Risk-based approaches to food control and identification of the weaknesses in the food control system help minimizing exposure to food hazards, while making more efficient use of the available resources, that may be scarce for many developing or transition countries. In the development and delivery of this project, high importance is placed on coherence with other activities, both in FAO and beyond, to support an optimal and a sustainable outcome, while linkages will be ensured between the technical and the political frameworks to facilitate policy changes based on the improved understanding about where the risks lie.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
Type
Research Project--Cooperative Agreements (U01)
Project #
2U01FD005037-06
Application #
9735500
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZFD1)
Program Officer
Moss, Julie
Project Start
2013-09-15
Project End
2023-08-31
Budget Start
2018-09-01
Budget End
2019-08-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2018
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Food & Agricultural Org/United Nations
Department
Type
DUNS #
432160539
City
Rome
State
Country
Italy
Zip Code
OO100