An evaluation of the usefulness of British Columbia's guideline in educating food bank operators

Diane Lee
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

  Background: Food Distribution Organizations (FDOs), such as food banks, community kitchen, and meal programs, are essential resources to relieve food insecurity in British Columbia. FDOs collect, process, store, and distribute donated food to the needy population. The BC Centre for Disease Control (BCCDC) published the Guidelines for Food Distribution Organizations with Grocery or Meal Programs in 2016 with purpose to educate FDOs on food safety and assist with their operational challenges. The guideline plays an important role especially for food bank operators who are not required to take food safety training. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the extent of the guideline use among food bank operators and assess its usefulness. This study also determines if the guideline use had a statistically significant association with higher knowledge in food safety. Methods: Self-administered electronic surveys created on Survey Monkey Canada were distributed to Foodbanks BC members by weekly online newsletter and email. The survey assessed the extent of usage of the guideline, current issues and knowledge level of FDO operators in BC. The survey response was collected over three weeks long period. Results: Among 37 FDO operators participated, 30 completed the survey. The majority of the operators was from BC, worked in food banks and had longer than 5 years long experience. 47% of participants did not know about the guideline. Among the guideline users, 83% agreed or strongly agreed that the guideline was useful. While retailers and groceries were the most common food donors, caterers and restaurants were the least common. Assessing each food item for safety was the most commonly encountered issue for FDOs. The least commonly encountered issue was having another FDO taking our donation from the donor. There was no association between the guideline use and level of food safety knowledge according to the Chi-square test (p= 0.89). There was no association between the years of experience and level of food safety knowledge (p= 0.23). The results did not show a statistically significant result potentially due to small sample size (n= 30). Conclusion: The results indicated while the guideline is useful among the users, the extent of its use should be widened. There is a need to improve accessibility of the guideline by modifying the content to address current practical issues, formatting it in a more user-friendly way, and utilizing better distribution means.  
对不列颠哥伦比亚省指导方针在教育食物银行经营者方面的有用性的评价
背景:食物分配组织(FDOs),如食物银行、社区厨房和膳食计划,是缓解不列颠哥伦比亚省粮食不安全的重要资源。食品服务机构收集、处理、储存捐赠食品,并将其分发给有需要的人。BC省疾病控制中心(BCCDC)于2016年发布了《食品配送组织食品杂货或膳食计划指南》,旨在对fdo进行食品安全教育,并协助他们应对运营挑战。该指南对那些不需要接受食品安全培训的食物银行经营者起着重要的作用。本研究的目的是评估指南在食物银行经营者中的使用程度,并评估其有用性。本研究还确定指南的使用是否与更高的食品安全知识有统计学上显著的关联。方法:在Survey Monkey Canada上创建的自我管理电子调查通过每周在线通讯和电子邮件分发给Foodbanks BC成员。该调查评估了指南的使用程度、当前问题和BC省FDO运营商的知识水平。调查反馈是在三周的时间内收集的。结果:37家FDO运营商中,30家完成了调查。大多数经营者来自不列颠哥伦比亚省,在食品银行工作,有超过5年的工作经验。47%的参与者不知道该指南。在指南使用者中,83%的人同意或强烈同意指南是有用的。零售商和食品杂货店是最常见的食物捐赠者,而餐饮业和餐馆是最不常见的。评估每种食品的安全性是食品监督员最常遇到的问题。最不常见的问题是另一个FDO从捐赠者那里拿走我们的捐赠。经卡方检验,指南的使用与食品安全知识水平无相关性(p= 0.89)。经验年数与食品安全知识水平之间无相关性(p= 0.23)。由于样本量小(n= 30),结果没有显示统计学上显著的结果。结论:虽然该指南在用户中是有用的,但应扩大其使用范围。有必要通过修改内容来解决当前的实际问题,以更方便用户的方式格式化指南,并利用更好的分发手段来提高指南的可访问性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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