Publication:

Safe & quality food: A shared responsibility – Need for busting myths and half-truths.

    Full details

    Authors & editors

    Sampathkumar, Raghavan [Author]

    Publisher Milling & Grain
    Year of publication 2018 March
    Languages

    Medium Digital
    Edition1
    Topics

    Nutrition & health

    Tags

    food safety

    Scope & contentIn continuation of my last column, I have recently come across a series of social media
    posts related to a key food safety issue: i.e. antibiotics in food particularly, their usage in
    animal production. As I mentioned earlier, genuine concerns are always to be given due
    consideration and attention by the stakeholders.
    But unfortunately, most, if not all that is getting projected in media are negative and any
    balanced or neutral perspectives never find a place in such skewed and heavily biased
    discussions.
    Similar logic is applied when it comes to usage of pesticides in crops where the industry
    always supports judicious usage. However, without giving due credits and acknowledging
    the proactive efforts by the industry to educate the users, these media stories simply throw mud on the industry with
    an aim to ultimately push for blanket bans on the products.
    One must understand depriving the producers of any valuable and research-based tool will only harm the entire
    food value chain and, particularly, consumers in the end. Through these kinds of scare-mongering and negative
    propaganda, organisations behind all these stunts are trying to sabotage the regulatory framework that was built
    based on extensive efforts and research evidence.
    In my earlier columns, I have mentioned about “borrowed ideologies” that are simply taken as such from a different
    part of the world and are applied in another geography with no regard to ground realities. This is what happening
    with regard to the above issue of antibiotics in meat production. Utopian green concepts are spawned in the media
    throughout the world in a concerted manner to scare the uninformed public. Most of these media stories are
    unfounded with probably a supporter or sponsor with ostensible altruism and questionable credibility.
    What does not usually get due attention is the other side of the story wherein producers and the input providers
    who place great emphasis on judicious usage, effective stewardship initiatives like training and capacity building
    for stakeholders and proactive R&D to develop newer, safer and more effective alternatives. Millions of dollars are
    spent just to prove something (e.g. a disease or disorder) that has an extremely remote chance of happening due to
    the use of such inputs, when used judiciously. Of course, those who misuse and abuse any inputs in food production
    must be dealt with an iron hand through appropriate regulations but it should not penalise the already compliant and
    quality-focused organised players who do genuine business.
    However, what happens due to these kinds of negative publicity, public perception gets awkwardly skewed and
    influenced to a great extreme. This builds pressure on the policy makers and regulators to think and introduce more
    regulations that are, in most cases, additional and unnecessary. Hence, cost of compliance for the organised sector
    in these industries increases and valuable resources, money and time is spent on trivial issues that can be avoided
    completely.
    The bottom-line here is that the industry needs to stand up and raise a unified voice against these scare-mongering
    tactics with vested interests. Further, policy makers and regulators must put their feet down firmly and decide to
    take a well-balanced, neutral and science-based perspective while evaluating any tools, or technologies. They
    should not be bowing down to the forces that have only the objective of unscrupulously disrupting the food industry
    without any scientific basis.
    Media must take a morally correct stand and must verify the facts and truth before publishing such half-truths.
    Finally, scientists, researchers and other stakeholders must speak the language of consumers. We must take steps to
    enhance the consumers’ understanding of how food is really produced and why they shouldn’t believe everything
    that is projected in media. Again, it is a shared responsibility.

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