| Literature DB >> 26483882 |
Cho-Il Kim1, Jeeyeon Lee2, Sungok Kwon2, Hae-Jung Yoon3.
Abstract
Recent amendment on the Food Sanitation Act in Korea mandated the Minister of Food & Drug Safety to secure the scientific basis for management and reevaluation of standards and specifications of foods. Especially because the current food safety control is limited within the scope of 'Farm to Market' covering from production to retail in Korea, safety control at the plane of true 'Farm to Fork' scope is urgently needed and should include 'total diet' of population instead of individual food items. Therefore, 'Total Diet Study (TDS)' which provides 'closer-to-real' estimates of exposure to hazardous materials through analysis on table-ready (cooked) samples of foods would be the solution to more comprehensive food safety management, as suggested by World Health Organization and Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Although the protection of diets from hazards must be considered as one of the most essential public health functions of any country, we may need to revisit the value of foods which has been too much underrated by the meaningless amount of some hazardous materials in Korea. Considering the primary value of foods lies on sustaining life, growth, development, and health promotion of human being, food safety control should be handled not only by the presence or absence of hazardous materials but also by maximizing the value of foods via balancing with the preservation of beneficial components in foods embracing total diet. In this regard, this article aims to provide an overview on TDS by describing procedures involved except chemical analysis which is beyond our scope. Also, details on the ongoing TDS in Korea are provided as an example. Although TDS itself might not be of keen interest for most readers, it is the main user of the safety reference values resulted from toxicological research in the public health perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Dietary intake; Estimate; Exposure; Mapping; Total diet study
Year: 2015 PMID: 26483882 PMCID: PMC4609970 DOI: 10.5487/TR.2015.31.3.227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Res ISSN: 1976-8257
WHO GEMS/Food Consumption Cluster Diets (27)
| Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country | Cluster | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| G01 | Afghanistan | G05 | Argentina | G10 | Belarus |
| Algeria | Bolivia | Bulgaria | |||
| Azerbaijan | Brazil | Canada | |||
| Iraq | Cape Verde | Croatia | |||
| Jordan | Chile | Cyprus | |||
| Libya | Colombia | Estonia | |||
| Mauritania | Costa Rica | Italy | |||
| Mongolia | Djibouti | Japan | |||
| Morocco | Dominican Republic | Latvia | |||
| Occupied Palestinian Territory | Ecuador | Malta | |||
| Pakistan | El Salvador | New Zealand | |||
| Tunisia | Guatemala | Republic of Korea | |||
| Turkmenistan | Guyana | Russian Federation | |||
| Uzbekistan | Honduras | United States of America | |||
| Yemen | India | G11 | Belgium | ||
| Malaysia | Netherland | ||||
| Maldives | G12 | Belize | |||
| Mauritius | Dominica | ||||
| Mexico | G13 | Botswana | |||
| G02 | Albania | New Caledonia | Burkina Faso | ||
| Bosnia and Herzegovina | Nicaragua | Central African Republic | |||
| Georgia | Panama | Chad | |||
| Kazakhstan | Peru | Ethiopia PDR | |||
| Kyrgyzstan | Seychelles | Gambia | |||
| Montenegro | Suriname | Haiti | |||
| Republic of Moldova | Tajikistan | Kenya | |||
| Ukraine | The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia | Malawi | |||
| Trinidad and Tobago | Mali | ||||
| Venezuela, Bolivarian Republic of | Namibia | ||||
| Niger | |||||
| Nigeria | |||||
| Senegal | |||||
| Somalia | |||||
| Sudan | |||||
| Swaziland | |||||
| United Republic of Tanzania | |||||
| Zimbabwe | |||||
| G03 | Angola | G06 | Armenia | G14 | Comoros |
| Benin | Cuba | Fiji Islands | |||
| Burundi | Egypt | Kiribati | |||
| Cameroon | Greece | Papua New Guinea | |||
| Congo | Iran, Islamic Republic of | Solomon Islands | |||
| Cote d’Ivoire | Lebanon | Sri Lanka | |||
| Democratic Republic of the Congo | Turkey | Vanuatu | |||
| Ghana | G07 | Australia | G15 | Czech Republic | |
| Guinea | Bermuda | Denmark | |||
| Liberia | Finland | Hungary | |||
| Madagascar | France | Ireland | |||
| Mozambique | Iceland | Lithuania | |||
| Paraguay | Luxemburg | Portugal | |||
| Togo | Norway | Romania | |||
| Zambia | Switzerland | Serbia and Montenegro | |||
| United Kingdom | Slovakia | ||||
| Uruguay | Slovenia | ||||
| Sweden | |||||
| G04 | Antigua and Barbuda | G08 | Austria | G16 | Gabon |
| Bahamas | Germany | Rwanda | |||
| Barbados | Poland | Uganda | |||
| Brunei Darussalam | Spain | ||||
| French Polynesia | G09 | Bangladesh | G17 | Samoa | |
| Grenada | Cambodia | Sao Tome and Principe | |||
| Israel | China | ||||
| Jamaica | Democratic People’s Republic of Korea | ||||
| Kuwait | Guinea Bissau | ||||
| Netherland Antilles | Indonesia | ||||
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | Lao People’s Democratic Republic | ||||
| Saint Lucia | Myanmar | ||||
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | Philippines | ||||
| Saudi Arabia | Sierra Leone | ||||
| United Arab Emirates | Thailand | ||||
| Timor Leste | |||||
| Viet Nam | |||||
Fig. 1.Flow chart for selecting representative foods for chemical analysis.
Fig. 2.Steps in selecting preparation methods for food samples each year.
Basic methods used in food sample preparation
| No. | Preparation | Example | No. | Preparation | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| 1 | Roasted/grilled | Beef | 18 | Stir fried and pan fried | Mushroom (omelet) |
| 2 | As is/raw | Strawberry | 19 | Stir fried and simmered | Beef (spaghetti sauce) |
| 3 | Pan fried | Wheat flour | 20 | Soaked in water | Dried seaweed |
| 4 | Pan fried and boiled | Tofu | 21 | Soaked in water and boiled | Dried seaweed (soup) |
| 5 | Blanched/parboiled | Spinach | 22 | Soaked in water and stir fried | Dried fern/bracken |
| 6 | Blanched and pan fried | Bean sprouts (mung bean pancake) | 23 | Boiled and strained (use solid mass) | Pork |
| 7 | Blanched and steamed | Cabbage (wonton) | 24 | Boiled, strained and baked | Spaghetti (oven) |
| 8 | Blanched and boiled | Bean sprouts (wonton in stew) | 25 | Boiled, strained and boiled | Noodles (stew) |
| 9 | Blanched and stir fried | Perilla leaves | 26 | Boiled, strained and stir fried | Spaghetti |
| 10 | Boiled | Kimchi (stew) | 27 | Boiled, strained and pan fried | Pork (mung bean pancake) |
| 11 | Boiled water added | Powdered infant formula | 28 | Boiled, strained and steamed | Starch noodle (wonton) |
| 12 | Boiled and taken out (use liquid) | Dried anchovy | 29 | Boiled, strained and fried | Starch noodle (wonton) |
| 13 | Steamed (rice) | White rice | 30 | Steamed | Corn |
| 14 | Steamed (rice) and boiled | Rice (rice in soup) | 31 | Steamed and fried | Wonton (fried wonton) |
| 15 | Steamed (rice) and stir fried | Fried rice | 32 | Steamed or baked | Sweet potato |
| 16 | Steamed (rice) and pan fried | Rice (scorched rice) | 33 | Fried | Potato (French fries) 17 Stir |
| 17 | Stir fried | Vegetables | |||
Fig. 3.Flow chart for sampling site selection.
Fig. 4.Time frame of food sampling and preparation.