Redefining the Moral Responsibilities for Food Safety: The Case of Red Meat in New Zealand*

2005 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 470-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keiko Tanaka
2010 ◽  
Vol 140 (12) ◽  
pp. 2221-2226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emily J. Morgan ◽  
Anne-Louise M. Heath ◽  
Ewa A. Szymlek-Gay ◽  
Rosalind S. Gibson ◽  
Andrew R. Gray ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 109-112
Author(s):  
C. Isaacs ◽  
T.A. White

FarmIQ Systems Limited was established as a Primary Growth Partnership (PGP) between the Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI), the meat processor Silver Fern Farms and Landcorp Farming Limited. FarmIQ aims to create a truly integrated value and information chain for red meat from product back to farm. The major output of this partnership is the FarmIQ System ‒ farm management software developed in New Zealand for New Zealand farmers. Hill country farmers have historically been at a disadvantage compared to their lowland counterparts in terms of the ease of quantifying farm performance. The FarmIQ System is a cloudbased tool that addresses these challenges of scale and isolation. It allows all types of red meat farmers to plan, communicate, record, analyse and report information about land, feed and animals easily and accurately. Keywords: FarmIQ System, integration, better decisions


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (5) ◽  
pp. 701-709 ◽  
Author(s):  
Helen Paterson ◽  
Jean Hay-Smith ◽  
Gareth Treharne ◽  
Peter Herbison ◽  
Caroline Howarth

The objective of this study was to examine the content validity and test–retest reliability of the Intuitive Eating Scale among pregnant women. A qualitative think-aloud study of the Intuitive Eating Scale analysed the content validity. Overall, the Intuitive Eating Scale made sense to pregnant women, but food safety affected the interpretation of some items. A version with instructions modified accounting for food safety, the Intuitive Eating Scale–Pregnancy, was subsequently shown to have stable scores over 5 weeks during the second trimester, mean change = −0.08 (95% limits of agreement: −0.61 to 0.45), r = 0.79, n = 240. The Intuitive Eating Scale–Pregnancy was acceptable for use in this New Zealand pregnant population.


2001 ◽  
Vol 86 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-80 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosalind S. Gibson ◽  
Anne-Louise M. Heath ◽  
Ma Luz S. Limbaga ◽  
Nicolas Prosser ◽  
C. Murray Skeaff

Reductions in red meat and increases in cereals in the diet may compromise the intake and bioavailability of Zn. In this cross-sectional study of 330 premenopausal New Zealand women aged 18–40 years, we have assessed the inter-relationships among dietary intakes (via computer-administered food-frequency questionnaire), biochemical Zn status, and anthropometric indices, and compared our results with earlier data. Fasting serum (12·00 (SD 1·36) ΜMOL/L) AND HAIR ZN (2·71 (sd 0·36) μmol/g) were lower than those for young Dunedin, New Zealand, women in 1973 (non-fasting serum Zn 18·6 (sd 4·6) μmol/l, hair Zn 2·99 (sd 0·35) μmol/g). Further, our mean serum Zn was at the 25th percentile of the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) (1976–1980) reference sample for women aged 20–44 years. Meat–poultry–fish contributed only 28 % total Zn in the present study, a level comparable with that from cereals–nuts–legumes (27 %), compared to about 40 % in 1989. Significant negative correlations existed between serum Zn and dietary [phytate]:[Zn] molar ratios (r-0·163, P<0·01); 35 % had diets with [phytate]:[Zn] >15, a level said to compromise Zn status. Mean serum Zn of a subgroup of non-oral contraceptive users free of infection was higher in the red-meat eaters (n149) compared with non-red-meat eaters (n48) (12·2v.11·8 μmol/g, P<0·05). In contrast, serum Zn was lower in those with dietary [phytate]:[Zn] ratios >15v.<15 (i.e. 11·9v.12·3 μmol/l, P=0·04). We postulate that the lower biochemical Zn status of these New Zealand women may be associated in part with changes in food selection patterns, which have led to a reduction in the bioavailability of dietary Zn.


2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ewa Anna Szymlek‐Gay ◽  
Anne‐Louise Mary Heath ◽  
Elaine Louise Ferguson ◽  
Andrew R Gray ◽  
Rosalind S Gibson

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