Ohio State University's Food Safety Hotline
COLUMBUS, Ohio -- For the first time, consumers can reach a food safety hotline at Ohio State University by e-mail: foodsafety@osu.edu.
Thanks to a partnership between The
Kroger Co. and the Center for Innovative Food Technology (CIFT), Ohio State's
Food Safety Hotline -- 1-800-752-2751 (toll-free in Ohio) -- has had trained
students answering calls from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday since July.
Before that, callers usually would leave a message unless a faculty member was
immediately available to assist. The hotline has been available since 1985 and
is housed in the university's Food Industries Center, in the College of Food,
Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences.
Hotline coordinator Stephanie
Smith, a food scientist with CIFT, and other faculty and staff involved with the
hotline realized that many of the people who called didn't have easy access to
the Internet. That's when they began thinking: What about the people who do have
such access? Since many people prefer to get information electronically, they
decided to add the e-mail address to the hotline options, offering consumers
another option for easily accessible information and answers to their food
safety questions.
The foodsafety@osu.edu address has just
been launched. Questions e-mailed to that address will automatically go to the
students answering hotline questions as well as a group of faculty members
studying different aspects of food safety from the Department of Food Science
and Technology, the Department of Human Nutrition, the Food Industries Center,
and Ohio State University Extension.
"One of the great things about the
hotline is that it is drawing together faculty with food-safety expertise from
across the university," said Lydia Medeiros, food safety specialist for OSU
Extension and professor of human nutrition in the College of Education and Human
Ecology. "We're all putting something on the table, and we're working together
much more closely than we have in the past."
Although food-safety
information is widely available on the Internet, particularly on the Web sites
of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the Food and Drug Administration, and the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Medeiros said they can be difficult
to navigate, particularly in trying to find specific information. That's where
the hotline -- both phone and e-mail -- can help.
In their downtime, the
students answering questions on the hotline are developing a comprehensive
database of food-safety related questions and answers to draw upon in answering
future questions. That will be another advantage of the hotline, Medeiros said:
"Some food safety Web sites only give their own perspective in answering
questions, but, sometimes, there's conflicting information regarding food
safety. Since we're independent of those agencies, we can be frank with
consumers and offer broader, more comprehensive information."
Besides
Medeiros, principal investigators involved in the project are Ken Lee, director
of the Center for Food Safety and AgroSecurity, and Valente Alvarez, director of
the Food Industries Center. Both Lee and Alvarez are also professors of food
science and technology.

