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Introduction. In Romania, National Authority for Veterinary Health and Food Safety
(NAVHFS) is the institution that coordinates all the activities focused on ensuring food
safety by identifying the risky products and eliminating these risks.
Material and methods. The purpose of the research was to analyze the way in which the
online media communicates the food incidents identified by The National Authority for
Veterinary Health and Food Safety. Starting from the list of products that reappeared on
the market in 2019 (available list on the website NAVHFS), I evaluated the way in which
media communicates about alerts regarding the reappearance of some products infected
with Listeria Monocytogenes, Salmonella or that contained unknown substances/unidentified objects. The methodology of the research included the content analysis of the articles
identified in the online media. In order to identify the articles, I used key words (food alert,
Listeria infections alert, Salmonella infections alert) which I introduced in Google Chrome.
The analyzed corpus was of N=119 articles selected according to the mentioned criteria
and published in the period January 1st
, 2019 – January 1st
, 2020.
The analysis grid was structured in such way as to allow the identification of some information regarding: the media type, time period, information regarding symptoms, information regarding health consequences, categories of risk population, presence/absence of
recommendations regarding necessary measures for protecting the consumer, categories
of people who communicate about alerts. The information was analyzed with the help of
SPSS 22.2.
Results. More than half of the alerts issued by NAVHFS were given for salmon (8 out of 14
alerts). Only two alerts were given for chicken or pork. However, the articles from the
online media inform the population to a greater extent about the alerts given for the
chicken, pork or beef products (59 articles out of 119).
The articles include information about withdrawn products or name the shop chain that
sells the products, but they do not present information about health consequences or
measures which need to be taken by the population in order to protect their health or in
order to be given a refund. Only 14.2% contain information about the diseases caused by
consuming such infected products. Almost half of the articles (47%) include information
regarding the consequences of consuming spoiled/infected products. Approximately one
third of the articles mentions risk groups, i.e. the people who are exposed to the highest
risks if they consume Listeria or Salmonella infected products or products that contain
many substances that cause allergies. Two out of five articles contain recommendations for
the population.
Conclusions. The way in which the online media from Romania present the food alerts is
different from the way in which traditional media or social media from other countries
cover this subject. In Romania journalists include only two topics (scientific and economic
topic), while the article from the international media covers four topics (scientific, economic, political and social – Shan et al 2014). |
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