A multi-case study exploring the effect of interventions on food safety culture maturity

IF 7 1区 农林科学 Q1 FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Food Research International Pub Date : 2024-11-05 DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2024.115286
Pauline Spagnoli , Peter Vlerick , Leonie Heijse , Amber Engels , Liesbeth Jacxsens
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Abstract

In each food business, a food safety culture (FSC) with a certain maturity level prevails. Previous research has demonstrated that the maturity level of the prevailing FSC can be assessed, but empirical proof of FSC maturity improvement remains limited especially in food processing companies. This study aimed to zoom in on the food safety culture improvement trajectory of four food processing case studies, focusing on human-organizational dimensions of food safety culture. First, a pre-assessment of the maturity of the prevailing food safety culture was executed in each case company (assessment time 1) by application of a validated mixed-methods methodology which includes three different tools (the food safety climate questionnaire, management interview, and on-site evidence collection visits). Based on this pre-assessment, underdeveloped dimensions or gaps in the prevailing food safety culture were identified to find improvement needs. In each of the 4 included distinct case companies, an intervention was implemented. In the first case company, case 1, a food safety key performance indicator (KPI) system was implemented as the intervention, with shared monitoring and shared responsibilities for KPI improvement. Coincidentally, case company 2 and case company 4 selected the same intervention. Case 2, as well as case 4, decided to implement structured group discussions with operators to collect input for collaborative action point selection, aiming for their active involvement in food safety. In case 3, a food safety culture check system was implemented for systematic reward and recognition. After intervention implementation, the post-assessment was conducted (assessment time 2), applying the exact same methodology as the pre-assessment. To investigate the extent of improvement, comparison of the pre- and post-assessment in each of the four cases was first done descriptively by comparing the means. Next, data collected via the food safety climate questionnaire was compared statistically via Mann-Whitney U tests. Analyses showed a substantial objective and subjective (employees’ perceptions) improvement of the targeted food safety culture gaps in companies 1 and 2, demonstrating that food safety culture improvement was achievable through a science-based and cocreated intervention process and implementation plan compliance. In cases 3 and 4, marginal improvements and unchanged scores were revealed. Comparison of cases’ trajectory characteristics and resulting success rates demonstrated that senior management involvement was essential for interventional success, as well as implementing culture interventions on an organizational or group level, instead of only including selected employees.

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探索干预措施对食品安全文化成熟度影响的多案例研究
在每个食品企业中,都普遍存在着具有一定成熟度的食品安全文化(FSC)。以往的研究表明,现行食品安全文化的成熟度是可以评估的,但食品安全文化成熟度改进的实证证据仍然有限,尤其是在食品加工企业。本研究旨在放大四个食品加工案例研究的食品安全文化改进轨迹,重点关注食品安全文化的人力-组织维度。首先,采用经过验证的混合方法,包括三种不同的工具(食品安全氛围调查问卷、管理层访谈和现场证据收集访问),对每个案例公司现行食品安全文化的成熟度进行预先评估(评估时间 1)。在此预评估的基础上,确定现行食品安全文化中发展不足的方面或差距,以发现改进需求。在 4 个不同的案例公司中,每个公司都实施了一项干预措施。在第一家案例公司,即案例 1 中,实施了食品安全关键绩效指标(KPI)系统作为干预措施,并对关键绩效指标的改进进行共同监督和分担责任。巧合的是,案例 2 和案例 4 选择了相同的干预措施。案例 2 和案例 4 决定与经营者开展有组织的小组讨论,收集他们的意见,以便共同选择行动点,目的是让他们积极参与食品安全工作。案例 3 实施了食品安全文化检查制度,以进行系统的奖励和表彰。干预措施实施后,进行了后评估(评估时间 2),采用的方法与前评估完全相同。为了调查改进的程度,首先通过比较四个案例的前后评估的平均值,对每个案例进行了描述性比较。然后,通过 Mann-Whitney U 检验对食品安全氛围问卷收集的数据进行统计比较。分析表明,1 号和 2 号公司的食品安全文化差距在客观和主观(员工的看法)方面都有了很大的改善,这表明通过科学的、共同创造的干预过程和实施计划的遵守,食品安全文化的改善是可以实现的。在案例 3 和 4 中,则出现了微小的改善和分数不变的情况。对案例的轨迹特征和由此产生的成功率进行比较后发现,高级管理层的参与对干预的成功至关重要,在组织或团体层面实施文化干预也是如此,而不是只包括选定的员工。
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来源期刊
Food Research International
Food Research International 工程技术-食品科技
CiteScore
12.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
1183
审稿时长
79 days
期刊介绍: Food Research International serves as a rapid dissemination platform for significant and impactful research in food science, technology, engineering, and nutrition. The journal focuses on publishing novel, high-quality, and high-impact review papers, original research papers, and letters to the editors across various disciplines in the science and technology of food. Additionally, it follows a policy of publishing special issues on topical and emergent subjects in food research or related areas. Selected, peer-reviewed papers from scientific meetings, workshops, and conferences on the science, technology, and engineering of foods are also featured in special issues.
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