A study has
unveiled the likely health risks for meat consumers in Tanzania for
failure to consider the...
animal welfare and food safety.
This was disclosed
yesterday by a representative of World Animal Protection, Dr Victor Yamo
during the presentation of a report titled 'consumers perception on
animal welfare and food safety' in Dar es Salaam.
He said meat
consumers in the country are less concerned about how an animal is
treated before it lands on the table for consumption.
"Throughout our
survey which was conducted in Arusha and Dar es Salaam, we found that
37.2 per cent of Tanzanians do not consider meat being free from
chemical contamination as important for their own well-being," Dr Yamo
said.
Moreover, Dr Yamo
said 54.37 per cent of the participants did not consider how the animal
is raised as a very important thing while 60.7 per cent and 56.8 per
cent did not care the welfare of the animal during transportation and
slaughter to be important.
"Our study also
showed that 89.9 per cent of the respondents would purchase more meat
only if it had food safety assurance marked from Supermarkets," said
him.
He then reminded
consumers that the use of antibiotics in farm animals has led to
proliferation of antimicrobial resistance which he said has serious
impact on human health.
"If you treat
animals well, they can bring good products for human consumption but,
likewise, if you treat them poorly, they can produce products which are
harmful for consumption," he said.
He also pointed out
that chicken remain the most loved meat in the country with 93 per cent
of consumption while that of cow is 85 per cent.
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