Record Details

A latent class analysis of food hygiene and handling practices among urban and peri-urban residents in Hyderabad, India

OAR@ICRISAT

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Relation http://oar.icrisat.org/11694/
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodcont.2020.107677
doi:10.1016/j.foodcont.2020.107677
 
Title A latent class analysis of food hygiene and handling practices among urban and peri-urban residents in Hyderabad, India
 
Creator Lagerkvist, C J
Hatab, A A
Nedumaran, S
Ravula, P
 
Subject Food and Nutrition
Food Security
Agricultural Economics
 
Description In developing countries, food-borne diseases, attributable to lack of, or inappropriate, food hygiene and handling
practices at home, are expected to increase due to a rapid growth in the consumption of fats and animal source
foods. The context-specific and situational practices corresponding to underlying traits of food hygiene and
handling practices for home-cooked food were investigated for a set of 662 randomly selected households in
Hyderabad, India. Results indicate that about one-third of the households lack access to a refrigerator. Of those
with a refrigerator, a majority (83%) had the temperature set at medium, with an actual temperature ranging
from 8 to 11 ◦C. Results also show that smell, followed by food appearance rather than taste or labelled expiry
dates were used as the main criteria for edibility. Furthermore, six indicators related to handling, storage and
cooking non-vegetarian food and three indicators related to storage of the cooked food were assessed. For
households with a refrigerator, the latent class analysis identified three exclusive and exhaustive subgroups of
households representing the heterogeneity of handling and hygiene traits, while two subgroups were identified
for households not having a refrigerator. Only a small proportion of households (12.6%) with a refrigerator were
profiled as having adequate and consistent practices. Remaining subgroups revealed substantial within-group
variations in terms of consistency in certain behaviors. Next, latent class modelling with covariates related to
socio-demographic, socio-economic, socio-spatial variables and health or dietary outcomes showed that having
higher than a primary school education, having a high percentage of food expenditure, or non-optimal refrigerator
temperature were predictive of the latent class with more adequate practices. For households without a
refrigerator, five covariates related to social class, age, income, and obesity distinguished the latent classes. These
findings of latent trait-specific behaviors have implications for actions aiming to inform and direct behavioral
change interventions on food safety practices in the developing countries.
 
Publisher Elsevier
 
Date 2020-10
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Identifier http://oar.icrisat.org/11694/1/main2.pdf
Lagerkvist, C J and Hatab, A A and Nedumaran, S and Ravula, P (2020) A latent class analysis of food hygiene and handling practices among urban and peri-urban residents in Hyderabad, India. Food Control (TSI), 121. pp. 1-9. ISSN 0956-7135