2018
DOI: 10.3382/ps/pex325
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Risk perceptions of public health and food safety hazards in poultry husbandry by citizens, poultry farmers and poultry veterinarians

Abstract: Differences in risk perceptions of public health and food safety hazards in various poultry husbandry systems by various stakeholder groups, may affect the acceptability of those husbandry systems. Therefore, the objective was to gain insight into risk perceptions of citizens, poultry farmers, and poultry veterinarians regarding food safety and public health hazards in poultry husbandry systems, and into factors explaining these risk perceptions. We surveyed risk perceptions of Campylobacter contamination of b… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…This distorted perception of health hazards might be driven by media and non-governmental organisations. This can be supported by the fact that consumers assess particular risks more highly than experts do [47,48]. Similar health concerns were discussed in the French groups.…”
Section: Arguments For the Uptake Of Meat Substitutessupporting
confidence: 55%
“…This distorted perception of health hazards might be driven by media and non-governmental organisations. This can be supported by the fact that consumers assess particular risks more highly than experts do [47,48]. Similar health concerns were discussed in the French groups.…”
Section: Arguments For the Uptake Of Meat Substitutessupporting
confidence: 55%
“…The infrequent instance of structural problematisation that we found follows logically from the general lack of connections across avian flu and other issues related to broiler production and the lack of systemic references found in our dataset, but is particularly disappointing given the availability of scientific literature on precisely this topic that was available at the time (Canavan, 2019;Gilbert et al, 2017;Leibler et al, 2009;Rohrl et al, 2019;Van Asselt et al, 2018, 2019Waltner-Toews, 2017). They are also surprising given research on public perception of the avian influenza outbreak at the Bernard Matthews plant during in February 2007, suggesting that the public was indeed making such links between industry practices and avian influenza, amongst other public health concerns (Rowe et al, 2008).…”
Section: Discussion: Newspaper Coverage About Avian Flu As a Wicked Pmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For example, consumers have very positive views about free-range systems for laying hens, not just in relation to the behavioral freedom they incontrovertibly provide for birds, but also for attributes that they patently do not possess, such as a lower risk of disease. Some consumers view freerange systems as posing a lower risk of avian influenza, even though the science shows this disease is primarily transmitted via outdoor contact with wild birds (van Asselt et al, 2018). Misunderstandings can produce paradoxical demands e.g., for high welfare food from systems that pose high health risks to animals.…”
Section: Challenge 3-sharing Knowledge and Aligning Goals Between Secmentioning
confidence: 99%