Heliyon (Jun 2024)

Barriers to ensuring and sustaining street food safety in a developing economy

  • Abigail Ampomah Adaku,
  • Irene Susana Egyir,
  • Cynthia Gadegbeku,
  • Angela Parry-Hanson Kunadu,
  • Vincent Amanor-Boadu,
  • Amos Laar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 11
p. e32190

Abstract

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Street foods are one of the highest contributors to foodborne illness in most developing economies around the world. In Ghana, diarrhoeal diseases, which are usually food or waterborne, are among the top ten causes of death. Most street food safety risks are avoidable when all food safety regulations are complied with. This paper identified and examined the barriers to the implementation of street food safety regulations in Ghana. A qualitative research approach was adopted by collecting data from nine focus group discussion sessions involving a total of 94 participants and five key informant interviews. The research uncovered three broad but interconnected categories of challenges to ensuring and sustaining street food safety: street vendor anonymity as a central challenge; poor trust in the regulatory system as root challenges; and vendor practices that risk the safety of street foods as consequential challenges. These findings have tangible policy implications. To best serve their purpose, policymakers need to understand these food safety challenges and ensure that food safety policies are responsive to the challenges.

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