| Literature DB >> 26190607 |
John Spink1, Douglas C Moyer2, Hyeonho Park3, Yongning Wu4, Victor Fersht5, Bing Shao6, Miao Hong7, Seung Yeop Paek8, Dmitry Edelev9.
Abstract
This paper introduces the topic of Food Fraud with translations to Russian, Korean, and Chinese. The concepts provide a system-wide focus leading to prevention. The goal is not to detect Food Fraud but to adjust entire food supply chains to reduce fraud opportunities. Food Fraud is a recently defined area of Food Protection between Food Safety (such as Salmonella or pesticide residue), and Food Defense (malicious intent to harm such as terrorism). Food Fraud is intentional with no intent to harm but only for economic gain. As with improving Food Safety and Food Defense, preventing Food Fraud is good for society and the economy. Society benefits through fewer public health threats from unauthorized acts. Society also benefits from increased consumer satisfaction and harmony. Food Security is increased through the production of more, higher-value products for consumers, commerce, and exporting. Food Fraud can reduce economic output because sickened citizens cannot work and it also reduces consumer confidence leading to less commerce.Entities:
Keywords: Criminology; Economically Motivated Adulteration; Food Crime; Food Fraud
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26190607 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2014.09.106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514