Physicians as Food‐Safety Educators: A Practices and Perceptions Survey
Citations Over TimeTop 14% of 2004 papers
Abstract
An estimated 4 million bacterial foodborne illnesses occur in the United States annually. Many of these illnesses can be prevented by educating the public about food-safety practices. We investigated both the role of physicians as food-safety educators and the barriers to providing food-safety information. Participants were randomly selected physicians (n=3117) practicing within the surveillance area of the Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance Network; 1100 were included in the study. Although only 331 (30%) of 1110 respondents provided food-safety information to their patients, 524 (68%) of 769 who did not provide information expressed interest in doing so. Physicians were more likely to provide food-safety information to patients if they perceived foodborne disease to be a serious problem, perceived food-safety education as their role, felt that patients perceived them as a valuable resource for food-safety advice, or felt comfortable making food-safety recommendations. A national physician education campaign that addresses barriers in food-safety education could improve food-safety education by physicians.
Related Papers
- → Apheis: public health impact of PM10 in 19 European cities(2004)144 cited
- → A cross sectional study on food safety knowledge among adult consumers(2018)79 cited
- Analysis of suddenly emerging public health events and their control strategies In Meizhou City,Guangdong during 2002 to 2007(2008)
- Epidemiologic Analysis of Public Health Emergencies in Henan province during 2004-2010(2012)
- Epidemiological Analysis on Public Health Emergencies in Nanjing City in 2008(2010)