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English
Academic Press Inc
10 October 2022
Present Knowledge in Food Safety: A Risk-Based Approach Through the Food Chain presents approaches for exposure-led risk assessment and the management of changes in the chemical, pathogenic microbiological and physical (radioactivity) contamination of ’food’ at all key stages of production, from farm to consumption. This single volume resource introduces scientific advances at all stages of the production to improve reliability, predictability and relevance of food safety assessments for the protection of public health.

This book is aimed at a diverse audience, including graduate and post-graduate students in food science, toxicology, microbiology, medicine, public health, and related fields. The book's reach also includes government agencies, industrial scientists, and policymakers involved in food risk analysis.

Edited by:   , , , , , , ,
Imprint:   Academic Press Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 276mm,  Width: 216mm, 
Weight:   3.150kg
ISBN:   9780128194706
ISBN 10:   0128194707
Pages:   1188
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Section I Changes in the chemical composition of food through the various stages of the food chain: plants before harvest 1. Natural toxicants in plant-based foods, including herbs and spices and herbal food supplements, and accompanying risks Ivonne M.C.M. Rietjens and Gerhard Eisenbrand 2. Soil, water, and air: potential contributions of inorganic and organic chemicals Wageh Sobhy Darwish and Lesa A. Thompson 3. Agrochemicals in the Food Chain R.H. Waring, S.C. Mitchell and I. Brown 4. Mycotoxins: still with us after all these years J. David Miller Section II Changes in the chemical composition of food throughout the various stages of the food chain: animal and milk production 5. Occurrence of antibacterial substances and coccidiostats in animal feed Ewelina Patyra, Monika Przenioslo-Siwczynska and Krzysztof Kwiatek 6. Residues relating to the veterinary therapeutic or growth promoting use and abuse of medicines Gyorgy Csiko Section III Changes in the chemical composition of food throughout the various stages of the food chain: fishing and aquaculture 7. Marine biotoxins as natural contaminants in seafood: European perspective Pablo Estevez, Jose M. Leao and Ana Gago-MartinezGago 8. Pollutants, residues and other contaminants in foods obtained from marine and fresh water Martin Rose 9. Antimicrobial drugs in aquaculture: use and abuse George Rigos and Dimitra Kogiannou Section IV Changes in the chemical composition of food throughout the various stages of the food chain: manufacture, packaging and distribution 10. Manufacturing and distribution: the role of good manufacturing practice Michael E. Knowles 11. Global regulations for the use of food additives and processing aids Youngjoo Kwon, Rebeca Lopez-Garcia, Susana Socolovsky and Bernadene Magnuson 12. Direct addition of flavors, including taste and flavor modifiers Ivonne M.C.M. Rietjens, Samuel M. Cohen, Gerhard Eisenbrand, Shoji Fukushima, Nigel J. Gooderham, F. Peter Guengerich, Stephen S. Hecht, Thomas J. Rosol, Matthew J. Linman, Christie L. Harman and Sean V. Taylor 13. Production of contaminants during thermal processing in both industrial and home preparation of foods Franco Pedreschi and Maria Salome Mariotti 14. Migration of packaging and labeling components and advances in analytical methodology supporting exposure assessment Cristina Nerin, Elena Canellas and Paula Vera 15. Safety assessment of refillable and recycled plastics packaging for food use Forrest L. Bayer and Jan Jetten 16. Preventing food fraud Steven M. Gendel Section V Changes in the chemical composition of food throughout the various stages of the food chain: identification of emerging chemical risks 17. Emerging contaminants Eleonora Dupouy and Bert Popping 18. Emerging contaminants related to plastic and microplastic pollution Ndaindila N.K. Haindongo, Christopher J. Breen and Lev Neretin 19. Endocrine disruptors Serhii Kolesnyk and Mykola Prodanchuk 20. Antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial residues in the food chain Jeffrey T. LeJeune, Alejandro Dorado Garcia and Francesca Latronico 21. Climate change as a driving factor for emerging contaminants Keya Mukherjee 22. Emerging mycotoxin risks due to climate change. What to expect in the coming decade? Angel Medina 23. Emerging contaminants in the context of food fraud Simon Kelly Douglas 24. Trends in risk assessment of chemical contaminants in food Eleonora Dupouy Section VI Changes in pathogenic microbiological contamination of food pre- and post-farm gate/fishing 25. Common and natural occurrence of pathogens, including fungi, leading to primary and secondary product contamination Maristela S. Nascimento and Marta H. Taniwaki 26. Contributions of pathogens from agricultural water to fresh produce Zeynal Topalcengiz, Matt Krug, Joyjit Saha, Katelynn Stull and Michelle Danyluk 27. Microbial pathogen contamination of animal feed Elena G. Olson, Tomasz Grenda, Anuradha Ghosh and Steven C. Ricke 28. Zoonoses from animal meat and milk Abani K. Pradhan and Shraddha Karanth 29. Abattoir hygiene Ivan Nastasijevic, Marija Boskovic and Milica Glisic 30. Dairy production: microbial safety of raw milk and processed milk products Victor Ntuli, Thulani Sibanda, James A. Elegbeleye, Desmond T. Mugadza, Eyassu Seifu and Elna M. Buys 31. Reduction of risks associated with processed meats Lynn M. McMullen 32. Pathogens and their sources in freshwater fish, sea finfish, shellfish, and algae Foteini F. Parlapani, Ioannis S. Boziaris and Christina A. Mireles DeWitt 33. The evolution of molecular methods to study seafood-associated pathogens Craig Baker-Austin and Jaime Martinez-Urtaza Section VII Changes in pathogenic microbiological contamination of food throughout the various stages of the food chain post-processing 34. Microbiological safety in food retail Karen Job, Karin Carstensen and Lucia Anelich 35. Reduction of the microbial load of food by processing and modified atmosphere packaging Elna M. Buys, B.C. Dlamini, James A. Elegbeleye and N.N. Mehlomakulu 36. Food defense: types of threat, defense plans, and mitigation strategies Louise Manning 37. Sampling, testing methodologies, and their implication in risk assessment, including interpretation of detection limits Carolina Ripolles-Avila, Brayan R.H. Cervantes-Huaman and Jose Juan Rodriguez-Jerez Section VIII Current and emerging advances in food safety evaluation: chemicals 38. The risk assessment paradigm for chemicals: a critical review of current and emerging approaches John Doe 39. The use of artificial intelligence and big data for the safety evaluation of US food-relevant chemicals Yuqi Fu, Thomas Luechtefeld, Agnes Karmaus and Thomas Hartung 40. Potential human health effects following exposure to nano- and microplastics, lessons learned from nanomaterials Hugo Brouwer, Femke L.N. Van Oijen and Hans Bouwmeester 41. Exposure assessment: critical review of dietary exposure methodologies—from budget methods to stepped deterministic methods Xiaoyu Bi 42. Exposure assessment: modeling approaches including probabilistic methods, uncertainty analysis, and aggregate exposure from multiple sources Marc C. Kennedy 43. Exposure assessment: real-world examples of exposure models in action from simple deterministic to probabilistic aggregate and cumulative models Cronan McNamara and Sandrine Pigat 44. The role of computational toxicology in the risk assessment of food products Timothy E.H. Allen, Steve Gutsell and Ans Punt 45. Risk-benefit assessment Jeljer Hoekstra, Maarten Nauta and Morten Poulsen 46. Exposure-driven risk management strategies for chemicals in food Samuel Benrejeb Godefroy 47. Role of human epidemiology in risk assessment and management Alfons Ramel 48. Risk-based approaches in food allergy Geert Houben, W. Marty Blom and Marjolein Meijerink 49. Risk assessment of mixtures in the food chain Angelo Moretto Section IX Current and emerging advances in food safety evaluation: pathogenic microorganisms including prions 50. Prions: detection of bovine spongiform encephalopathy and links to variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease Timm Konold, Mark Arnold and Amie Adkin 51. Role of real-time DNA analyses, biomarkers, resistance measurement, and ecosystem management in Campylobacter risk analysis Jasmina Vidic, Sandrine Auger, Marco Marin, Francesco Rizzotto, Nabila Haddad, Sandrine Guillou, Muriel Guyard-Nicodeme, Priya Vizzini, Alessia Cossettini, Marisa Manzano, Zoi Kotsiri, Efstratia Panteleli and Apostolos Vantarakis 52. Identification and assessment of exposure to emerging foodborne pathogens using foodborne human viruses as an example Robert L. Buchanan 53. Transfer of viruses implicated in human disease through food Kiran N. Bhilegaonkar and Rahul P. Kolhe 54. Role of gut microbiota in food safety Sik Yu So, Qinglong Wu and Tor Savidge 55. Bacterial cell-to-cell communication and its relevance to food safety Felipe Alves de Almeida, Leonardo Luiz de Freitas, Deisy Guimaraes Carneiro and Maria Cristina Dantas Vanetti 56. Significance of identifying microbial DNA in foods and raw materials without concomitant detection of respective viable populations Luca Cocolin 57. Whole-genome sequencing for food safety Nigel French 58. Drug-resistant bacteria from “farm to fork”: impact of antibiotic use in animal production Michaela van den Honert and Louwrens Hoffman 59. Quick detection and confirmation of microbes in food and water Ricardo Franco-Duarte, Snehal Kadam, Karishma S. Kaushik, Sakshi Painuli, Prabhakar Semwal, Natalia Cruz-Martins and Celia Fortuna Rodrigues Section X Safety assessment of genetically modified organisms and other biological alterations 60. New genetic modification techniques: challenges and prospects Graham Head and George T. Tzotzos 61. Safety assessment of food and feed derived from genetically modified plants Hanspeter Naegeli Section XI Food safety: risk perception and communicating with the public 62. Consumer attitudes about the use of new technologies in agrifood industries Roger Clemens, Peter Pressman and A. Wallace Hayes 63. Microbiological risks versus putative chemical risks based on hazard rather than exposure: can it be rationalized for public understanding? John O’Brien 64. Communicating about risk in relation to food with the public and countering media alarmism Katherine Rich and Gary Bowering 65. Consumer attitudes toward novel agrifood technologies: a critical review on genetic modification and synthetic biology Shan Jin, Wenjing Li, Francis Z. Naab, David Coles and Lynn J. Frewer Section XII New and emerging foods and technologies 66. Safety, nutrition and sustainability of plant-based meat alternatives Jane M. Caldwell and E.N. Clare Mills 67. The role of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in food risk assessment and prediction Giannis Stoitsis, Michalis Papakonstantinou, Manos Karvounis and Nikos Manouselis 68. Blockchain: an enabler for safe food in global supply networks John G. Keogh, Abderahman Rejeb, Nida Khan and Khaldoon Zaid-Kaylani Section XIII Hazard versus risk-based approaches to food safety regulations 69. Pros and cons of hazard- versus risk-based approaches to food safety regulation Jyotigna M. Mehta and Ivonne M.C.M. Rietjens Section XIV Impact of food safety on global trade 70. Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI): underpinning the safety of the global food chain, facilitating regulatory compliance, trade, and consumer trust Anne Gerardi Section XV Climate change, population demographics, urbanization, and economic growth: impact on food safety 71. Food and nutrition security: challenges for farming, procurement, and consumption Tessa Avermaete, Wannes Keulemans, Olivier Honnay, Gerard Govers, Barbara De Coninck and Tjitske Anna Zwart 72. Climate change: food safety challenges in the near future Fumiko Kasuga

Dr. Michael E. Knowles is a pharmacist and medicinal chemist who spent the first half of his career with the UK Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, where he became the chief scientist (Fisheries & Food) and head of the Food Science Group. In that position he was a member of the Advisory Committee on Pesticides, the Committee on Veterinary Medicines, and chair of the Steering Group on Chemical aspects of Food Surveillance. The second half of his 44-year career was spent with The Coca-Cola Company, where he became the vice president of Global Scientific & Regulatory Affairs, from which he retired in 2013. As a graduate of the University of Nottingham, Dr. Knowles is a fellow of several scientific societies; past global president of the ILSI and chair of the ILSI Europe Board; a liveryman of the Society of Apothecaries, London; and a freeman of the City of London. His scientific publications are mainly in the area of food safety, and he is joint founding editor of the journal Food Additives and Contaminants. He is a former chair of the Food Group of the UK Society of Chemical Industry (SCI), former chairman of the Board of the European Technology Platform’s “Food for Life,” a former governing council member of the International Union of Food Science & Technology, and chair of its membership committee and various other committees dealing with food safety and regulatory affairs in EU food and drink associations. Professor Lucia Anelich has a PhD in microbiology and is currently the managing director of her own food safety training and consulting business, Anelich Consulting, which she started in 2011. Prior to that, she spent 5 years at the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa where she established and headed up a food safety body for the food industry, a first for the country, until 2010. Before joining the CGCSA, she spent 25 years in academia at the Tshwane University of Technology where she was the head of Department of Biotechnology and Food Technology and associate professor. She is a member of the International Commission on the Microbiological Specifications for Food (ICMSF), fellow of the International Academy of Food Science and Technology, past chair of the Scientific Council of IUFoST, immediate past chair of the Food Hygiene Committee of the South African Bureau of Standards, and immediate past president of the South African Association for Food Science and Technology. She is an adjunct professor at the Central University of Technology, South Africa and is currently a food safety expert for the African Union (AU) and a member of the advisory group establishing the AU Food Safety Authority. Alan Boobis is an Emeritus professor of toxicology at Imperial College London. He was a professor of biochemical pharmacology and director of the Toxicology Unit (supported by Public Health England and the Department of Health) at the Imperial College until June of 2017, when he retired after over 40 years at the college. His main research interests lie in mechanistic toxicology, drug metabolism, mode of action, and chemical risk assessment. He has published approximately 250 original research papers (h-index of 80). He is a member of several national and international advisory committees, the Committee on Toxicity (chair), the WHO Study Group on Tobacco Product Regulation, Joint FAO/WHO Expert Committee on Food Additives (veterinary residues), and Joint FAO/WHO Meeting on Pesticide Residues. He has been a member of the UK Advisory Committee on Pesticides, Committee on Carcinogenicity, the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Panel on Food Contaminants, and the EFSA Panel on Plant Protection Products and their Residues. He is a member and a past chair of the Board of Trustees of the International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) and a member of the Board of Directors and has served as the vice president of ILSI Europe and has served as a member and chair of the Board of Trustees of the Health and Environmental Sciences Institute (HESI). He sits on several international scientific advisory boards, in both the public and private sectors. Awards include honorary fellow of the British Toxicology Society, fellow of the British Pharmacological Society, the BTS John Barnes Prize Lectureship, honorary membership and Merit Award of EUROTOX, the Royal Society of Chemistry Toxicology Award, the Society of Toxicology Arnold J. Lehman Award, the Toxicology Forum Philippe Shubik Distinguished Scientist Award, and Officer of the British Empire (OBE). Dr. Bert Popping is an independent consultant and managing director of the strategic food consulting company FOCOS. He previously worked as chief scientific officer and director of Scientific Development and Regulatory Affairs for multinational contract laboratories. Dr. Popping has more than 20 years of experience in the food testing industry and has authored over 50 publications on topics related to food safety, food authenticity, food analysis, validation, and regulatory assessments. He also edited one book in this field. He is member of the editorial board of the Journal of Food Additives and Contaminants and the Journal of Food Analytical Methods. He serves on the Thought Leaders Advisory Committee of AOAC International and on panels of several other international organizations. He is an active member of numerous national and international organizations, including USP, CEN, ISO, BSI, and several governmental method working groups. He also chairs a recently established working group on emerging and future technology developments and their impact on food industry and consumers. In addition, Dr. Popping serves on the Board of Directors of AOAC International.

Reviews for Present Knowledge in Food Safety: A Risk-Based Approach Through the Food Chain

"""It contains such a vast amount of technical material that even a specialist would probably be able to critique only two or three chapters in detail. Nonetheless, it is an important work, and I believe that everyone involved in food safety should be familiar with it. This work makes every effort to be comprehensive. As a result, only a comparatively small part of it relates directly to fresh produce, but the whole volume contains insights in various areas that are of direct value. Or, to put it in the book’s terms: “Using a risk-based evaluation strategy increases the ability to use alternative approaches and new technologies to inform risk assessment, better characterize risk, and improve management decisions. These new, scientifically more robust methods are more human relevant and”—a humanitarian benefit— “also frequently decrease the number of animals needed to determine human risk” (1071). All of this may seem terribly abstract, but it will have a huge impact on which agrichemicals and GMO crops will be used in the future and how."" --Richard Smoley, Blue Book Services, Inc."


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