Scientists Strive to Find How to Make Food Safety Messages Stick
4/26/2013

Ohio State researchers Jeff LeJeune and Lydia Medeiros are trying to find ways to make food safety messages more effective. Photo by Ken Chamberlain, Ohio State University
WOOSTER, Ohio -- Every year, an estimated one in six Americans gets sick from foodborne illness. Three thousand of them die.
Those
statistics are frustrating for Lydia Medeiros and Jeff LeJeune. The
researchers are among a half-dozen go-to experts on food safety at Ohio
State University. They've dedicated their careers to learning about
disease-causing pathogens and getting the word out to let people know
how they can protect themselves.
But telling people what to do is quite different than people actually doing it.
"Apparently,
beating people over the head with data doesn't work," said LeJeune, a
microbiologist with Ohio State's College of Food, Agricultural, and
Environmental Sciences.
That's why these educators are
studying techniques from the fields of psychology and risk
communications: They want to find more effective ways of communicating
food safety messages that actually persuade people to change the way
they make decisions about food.
"The recurring theme is, ‘How do
you motivate people to change their behaviors?’" LeJeune said. "What
we're finding is that it all depends on the audience."
There is usually a trigger for people that will motivate them to get more information on a topic, said Medeiros.
“For pregnant women, for example, it's protecting the health of the baby," she said.
Messages
about food safety need to be tailored to audiences depending on what's
motivating them to behave in a certain way, she said.
LeJeune and
Medeiros will present preliminary results of their research and have
organized and will lead an international workshop, "New Paradigms in Food Safety Communication: An Interactive Workshop," on May 14 at the International Association for Food Protection's European Symposium on Food Safety in Marseille, France.
LeJeune
heads the Food Animal Health Research Program (FAHRP) with the
college's Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Program (OARDC) in
Wooster and also has an appointment with Ohio State University
Extension. Medeiros is faculty emeritus in FAHRP and former food safety
specialist with OSU Extension. She came out of retirement specifically
to work on this project. OARDC and OSU Extension are the college's
research and outreach arms, respectively.
Both LeJeune and
Medeiros have done extensive research previously on food safety
communication and education. LeJeune has worked on projects to reach
dairy and vegetable workers about food safety on the farm, and Medeiros
has examined the effectiveness of food safety messages for at-risk
groups, including pregnant women; infants, children and the elderly;
people with cancer, HIV or AIDS; and organ transplant patients (http://foodsafety.osu.edu/ask-the-pros/health-professionals/hrfs/).
For
this research, the scientists are combining techniques they have used
in past studies, conducting surveys as well as interviews and focus
groups of consumers to gather subjective information. The work they've
done so far is a pilot project for a larger national study they plan to
begin this fall.
In the current study, the researchers have
focused on people's milk-drinking habits, interviewing individuals to
determine their motivations for choosing to drink either pasteurized or
unpasteurized milk. They also are looking at whether there are
differences in these motivations between urban and rural populations.
Drinking
unpasteurized, or "raw," milk is considered by public health
authorities to be hazardous because disease-causing bacteria can
contaminate milk even from healthy dairy cows or from environmental
contamination during collection and storage of milk.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
milk was a common cause of disease before the advent of pasteurization.
Many states, including Ohio, ban the sale of raw milk, but those who
want to drink it often buy into a "herd-share" program and pick up their
share of milk directly from the farm.
The researchers are using the theoretical concept of "mental models"
from the field of psychology when interviewing participants or leading
focus groups. The principle has been used in the past to approach other
public health issues, as well as wildlife management and environmental
issues.
"Everyone has a mental model for every decision they
make," Medeiros explained. "Just take crossing the street.
Subconsciously, you assess whether it's safe to cross, or if you should
wait, or walk to the corner."
LeJeune appreciates the approach.
"It
gives us data, some science-based decision-making to use in developing
messages,” he said “It's not just 'Let's throw it against the wall and
see if it sticks.'"
Medeiros said she is intrigued by the part of the model that incorporates the concept of "strongly held beliefs."
"When
a person has very strongly held beliefs, they are the least receptive
to a message that's contrary to what they already believe," she said.
"They do not want to change their minds. That's especially true with an
issue like raw milk."
So far in their study, the researchers are
finding that people who drink raw milk and who also live in urban areas
tend to have a strong distrust of institutional authorities that are
charged with the safety of the food supply. Interestingly, the same
isn't true of people who drink raw milk who live in rural areas.
"That
says we should design different messages for these two populations,"
Medeiros said. "If you're addressing people who drink raw milk and live
in the city, you're not going to get your message across if you start
with 'I'm from the Ohio Department of Agriculture, and I'm here to tell
you something.'"
However, that type of message may work better in
rural areas and for people who drink pasteurized milk, both of whom tend
to have a much higher level of trust in such authorities, she said.
Medeiros
also has noticed anecdotally from the study's focus groups that people
who drink raw milk tend to believe they are very knowledgeable about
milk-related food safety and nutrition information.
"But when we
actually surveyed participants on their level of knowledge of food
safety, almost everyone -- whether they drink raw or pasteurized milk,
or even if they have an R.D. (for registered dietitian) after their name
-- it is at about a C-minus level when it comes to food safety
knowledge,” she said “There's not any real difference."
That poses a problem for food safety communicators, LeJeune said.
"If you think you have knowledge, and you really don't…"
Medeiros finished his thought: "Then you're not going to go out and seek more information."
And whether an audience is receptive to new information is key, Medeiros said.
"If
you can begin to influence a person's attitudes through education and
information, you can begin to influence their evaluation of their basic
beliefs, and that's the strongest indicator for behavior change," she
said.
At the May conference in Marseille, the researchers will
present a draft of the food-safety mental model they have identified
from the pilot study. After conducting the national survey and
finalizing the model, they plan to develop a food safety communication
campaign based on the data they've gathered. They will post additional
information online at http://foodsafety.osu.edu.
The study is funded by the National Integrated Food Safety Initiative of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
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Writers
Martha Filipic 614-292-9833 filipic.3@osu.edu
Sources
Lydia Medeiros 330-263-3747 medeiros.1@osu.edu
Jeff LeJeune 330-263-3739 lejeune.3@osu.edu
Editor: To reach Medeiros or LeJeune, email is best.
Writer:
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