Australian Food Safety Information Council
The Australian Food Safety Information Council is a health promotion charity The Council develops consumer-targeted food safety information to address the number of Australians getting sick from food poisoning by providing simple, easy to follow consumer information on the handling, storage and preparation of food. A study by Food Standards Australia New Zealand and the Australian National University in 2022 estimated there are 4.67 million cases of food poisoning in Australia each year that result in 47,900 hospitalisations, 38 deaths and a cost to the economy of $2.1 billion.
History and governance
The council was founded in 1997 as the Food Safety Campaign Group and incorporated in 1999 as the Food Safety Information Council. It is supported by state and territory health and food safety agencies, local government, CSIRO, leading professional, industry and community organisations.The current Council Chair is Dr Scott Crerar Previous Chairs have been Cathy Moir who was appointed in March 2019., Rachelle Williams who was appointed in July 2015, Professor Michael Eyles who was appointed in August 2007 and his predecessor was Professor Tom McMeekin AO. Before that Barry Shay was the 2nd Chair and the founding Chair was Bruce Bevan.
Activities
The Food Safety Information Council provides consumer information on the handling, storage and preparation of food. They organize Australian Food Safety Week held during the second week of November each year.To ensure the advice the Council provides is scientifically based, the Council has a Scientific Committee who vet all educational material before it is published.
The council also has a role in providing consumer advice on food recalls and emergencies such as the Listeria in rockmelons/canteloupes outbreak in March 2018 and frozen berries Hepatitis A recall in February 2015 They also take part in education events such as World Health Day which focussed on food safety.
Research topics and education
As part of its educational activities, the Food Safety Information Council has carried out consumer research into food safety knowledge. The main causes were Norovirus, pathogenic Escherichia coli, Campylobacter spp. and non-typhoidal Salmonella spp., although the causes of approximately 80% of illnesses were unknown. A question and answer fact sheet published by the Australian Department of Health together with this study references the Food Safety Information Council's consumer advice as a means of reducing food borne disease. Most foodborne disease outbreaks in Australia have been linked to raw or minimally cooked eggs or poultry. The Food Safety Information Council estimates that one third of cases of food poisoning occur in the home.Handwashing
Consumer research released in October 2019, found that more than 20% of Australians admitted that they didn't always wash their hands after using the toilet and nearly 40% of respondents stated they didn't always wash before handling food. A further 43% of Australian adults say they don't always wash after handing raw eggs. The research showed gender differences, as men were less likely than women to always wash hands after going to the toilet and before touching food. People under age 34 were less likely to wash their hands.A previous 2007 study found that 97 per cent of Australians knew that washing their hands before handling food is essential, this compared with 54 per cent who didn't wash their hands in 1997 – a 43 per cent improvement.