GAPs (Good Agricultural Practices) and GMPs (Good Manufacturing
Practices) are a set of principles, regulations and technical
recommendations applicable to production, processing and food transport,
addressing human health care, environment protection and improvement
of worker conditions and their families.
Good Agricultural Practices is based on the principals of risk
prevention, risk analysis, sustainable agriculture by means of
Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and Integrated Crop Management (ICM),
using existing technologies for the continuous improvement of farming
systems.
The Good Agricultural Practices is the utmost important for protection
of consumer health. It requires ensuring safety throughout the food
chain and it must be compulsory transparent not only from the table but
also upstream (e.g. fertilizers, plant protection, animal feed). Good
Agricultural Practices offers benefits to farmers and consumers to
meet specific objectives of food security, food quality,
production efficiency, livelihood and environmental protection.
Good Agricultural Practices includes farm codes of conduct, manuals,
guidelines, standards, and regulations that have been developed by
growers associations, food processors, retailers, governments, and NGOs.
The aim of these codes of conduct is to assure that the food produced
is at the quality level demanded by consumers and safe for human
consumption. The guidelines are based on science, and should conform to
local and national standards.
Good Agricultural Practices - important for protection of consumer health
Food safety can be defined as the “the avoidance of food borne pathogens, chemical toxicants and physical hazards, but also includes issues of nutrition, food quality and education.” The focus is on “microbial, chemical or physical hazards from substances than can cause adverse consequences.”
Showing posts with label Good Agricultural Practices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Good Agricultural Practices. Show all posts
Friday, November 22, 2019
Friday, September 06, 2019
Food safety on the farm
According to the USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service, food safety is
defined as “A suitable product which when consumed orally either by a
human or an animal does not cause health risk to consumer.” The chain of
food safety begins with farmers in the field, but continues through
packinghouses, value-added production operations, farmers markets and
other vendors, and ultimately ends with the consumer.
Food safety practices must be in place at every point along the farm-to-fork continuum, including the farmers market. Each year 1 out of 6 Americans will become ill from a foodborne pathogen. These pathogens can be bacteria, viruses or parasites that are spread by contaminated food.
There are three potential sources of health risks caused by food:
*Chemicals
*Physicals
*Biological
Fresh produce is often eaten raw—there is no “kill-step” or action taken to kill bacteria/pathogens (in contrast to milk, for example, where pasteurization is used as a “kill step” to eliminate pathogens). Produce that is not cooked is therefore considered higher risk for pathogens than those fruits and vegetables that are cooked.
Healthy ecosystems contribute to food safety in a number of ways. Healthy, living soil will harbor a greater number and variety of both macroscopic and microscopic organisms, and will thus be less susceptible to colonization by unwanted pathogens. Vegetative buffers can filter pathogens from streams and runoff, and protect cropland from windborne pathogens.
It is important for fruit and vegetable growers to implement Good Agricultural Practices, also known as GAPs, on their farms to reduce the chance of foodborne pathogens contaminating their produce. Market managers should become knowledgeable of GAPs and strongly encourage vendors to have a food safety plan implemented on their farms.
Food safety on the farm
Food safety practices must be in place at every point along the farm-to-fork continuum, including the farmers market. Each year 1 out of 6 Americans will become ill from a foodborne pathogen. These pathogens can be bacteria, viruses or parasites that are spread by contaminated food.
There are three potential sources of health risks caused by food:
*Chemicals
*Physicals
*Biological
Fresh produce is often eaten raw—there is no “kill-step” or action taken to kill bacteria/pathogens (in contrast to milk, for example, where pasteurization is used as a “kill step” to eliminate pathogens). Produce that is not cooked is therefore considered higher risk for pathogens than those fruits and vegetables that are cooked.
Healthy ecosystems contribute to food safety in a number of ways. Healthy, living soil will harbor a greater number and variety of both macroscopic and microscopic organisms, and will thus be less susceptible to colonization by unwanted pathogens. Vegetative buffers can filter pathogens from streams and runoff, and protect cropland from windborne pathogens.
It is important for fruit and vegetable growers to implement Good Agricultural Practices, also known as GAPs, on their farms to reduce the chance of foodborne pathogens contaminating their produce. Market managers should become knowledgeable of GAPs and strongly encourage vendors to have a food safety plan implemented on their farms.
Food safety on the farm
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