Article Open Access December 25, 2021

Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua

1
Department of Technical and Vocational Education St. Louis College of Education, Kumasi, Ghana
2
Department of Technical and Vocational, Seven Day Adventist College of Education, Koforidua-Asokore,
3
Ghana
Page(s): 1-9
Received
July 29, 2021
Revised
December 10, 2021
Accepted
December 24, 2021
Published
December 25, 2021
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Scientific Publications
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APA Style
Arthur, P. , Arthur, P. Lah, E. S. , Lah, E. S. Turkson, R. , & Turkson, R. (2022). Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua. Current Research in Public Health, 1(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojfn.2022.120
ACS Style
Arthur, P. ; Arthur, P. Lah, E. S. ; Lah, E. S. Turkson, R. ; Turkson, R. Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua. Current Research in Public Health 2022 1(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojfn.2022.120
Chicago/Turabian Style
Arthur, Philomena, Philomena Arthur. Endurance Serwaa Lah, Endurance Serwaa Lah. Regina Turkson, and Regina Turkson. 2022. "Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua". Current Research in Public Health 1, no. 1: 1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojfn.2022.120
AMA Style
Arthur P, Arthur PLah ES, Lah ESTurkson R, Turkson R. Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua. Current Research in Public Health. 2022; 1(1):1-9. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojfn.2022.120
@Article{crph120,
AUTHOR = {Arthur, Philomena and Lah, Endurance Serwaa and Turkson, Regina and Anane, Monica},
TITLE = {Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua},
JOURNAL = {Current Research in Public Health},
VOLUME = {1},
YEAR = {2022},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {1-9},
URL = {/10.31586/ojfn-1-1-110.31586/ojfn/1/1/1},
ISSN = {2831-5162},
DOI = {10.31586/ojfn.2022.120},
ABSTRACT = {The study assessed knowledge base of food vendors’ hygiene practices in Koforidua in the eastern region of Ghana. As a descriptive survey study, fifty (50) respondents made up of food vendors were purposively and conveniently sampled respectively for the study. The data gathered was analyzed using SPSS Version 17 and converted into frequencies, percentages and tables. This study concluded that street food vendors do have relevant knowledge of hygienic food handling practices through the training they receive, but the knowledge they acquire is not put into practice. The study also revealed that effective and regular inspections by Environmental Health officers will couple stringent enforcement of all regulations governing their practices to streamline the activities of the food vendors for better health of their consumers. It is recommended that the training and certification of food vendors should be organized on a regular basis and should be designed using the Hazard Analysis of Critical Control Point (HACCP). Environmental Health Officers must conduct follow-up exercises after training programmes to ascertain whether food vendors are putting knowledge they have acquired into practice. It is also recommended that, the Metropolitan/Municipal/District environmental health officers should ensure that inspection of street food vendors are carried out effectively, efficiently and regularly so as to monitor the food handling practices of the food vendors’ right from the time of preparation to the point of sale. This is to ensure that food served to consumers is safe for consumption. Vendors who do not put the knowledge they have acquired into practice should have their certificates retrieved and signed up for retraining.},
}
%0 Journal Article
%A Arthur, Philomena
%A Lah, Endurance Serwaa
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%A Anane, Monica
%D 2022
%J Current Research in Public Health

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AB  - The study assessed knowledge base of food vendors’ hygiene practices in Koforidua in the eastern region of Ghana. As a descriptive survey study, fifty (50) respondents made up of food vendors were purposively and conveniently sampled respectively for the study. The data gathered was analyzed using SPSS Version 17 and converted into frequencies, percentages and tables. This study concluded that street food vendors do have relevant knowledge of hygienic food handling practices through the training they receive, but the knowledge they acquire is not put into practice. The study also revealed that effective and regular inspections by Environmental Health officers will couple stringent enforcement of all regulations governing their practices to streamline the activities of the food vendors for better health of their consumers. It is recommended that the training and certification of food vendors should be organized on a regular basis and should be designed using the Hazard Analysis of Critical Control Point (HACCP). Environmental Health Officers must conduct follow-up exercises after training programmes to ascertain whether food vendors are putting knowledge they have acquired into practice. It is also recommended that, the Metropolitan/Municipal/District environmental health officers should ensure that inspection of street food vendors are carried out effectively, efficiently and regularly so as to monitor the food handling practices of the food vendors’ right from the time of preparation to the point of sale. This is to ensure that food served to consumers is safe for consumption. Vendors who do not put the knowledge they have acquired into practice should have their certificates retrieved and signed up for retraining.
DO  - Knowledge Base on Food Borne Diseases and Hygiene in Ghana: Appraisal of Food Vendors in Oguaa Koforidua
TI  - 10.31586/ojfn.2022.120
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