EFSA Journal (Jul 2019)

Managing evidence in food safety and nutrition

  • Ermanno Cavalli,
  • Mary Gilsenan,
  • Jane Van Doren,
  • Danica Grahek‐Ogden,
  • Jane Richardson,
  • Fabrizio Abbinante,
  • Claudia Cascio,
  • Paul Devalier,
  • Nikolai Brun,
  • Igor Linkov,
  • Kathleen Marchal,
  • Bette Meek,
  • Claudia Pagliari,
  • Irene Pasquetto,
  • Peter Pirolli,
  • Steven Sloman,
  • Lazaros Tossounidis,
  • Elisabeth Waigmann,
  • Holger Schünemann,
  • Hans Verhagen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2903/j.efsa.2019.e170704
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. S1
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Evidence (‘data’) is at the heart of EFSA's 2020 Strategy and is addressed in three of its operational objectives: (1) adopt an open data approach, (2) improve data interoperability to facilitate data exchange, and (3) migrate towards structured scientific data. As the generation and availability of data have increased exponentially in the last decade, potentially providing a much larger evidence base for risk assessments, it is envisaged that the acquisition and management of evidence to support future food safety risk assessments will be a dominant feature of EFSA's future strategy. During the breakout session on ‘Managing evidence’ of EFSA's third Scientific Conference ‘Science, Food, Society’, current challenges and future developments were discussed in evidence management applied to food safety risk assessment, accounting for the increased volume of evidence available as well as the increased IT capabilities to access and analyse it. This paper reports on presentations given and discussions held during the session, which were centred around the following three main topics: (1) (big) data availability and (big) data connection, (2) problem formulation and (3) evidence integration.

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