Consumer Confidence in Food Risk Management in Europe Results from a multi-phase study
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Transcript of Consumer Confidence in Food Risk Management in Europe Results from a multi-phase study

Consumer Confidence in Food Risk Management in EuropeResults from a multi-phase study
E Van Kleef, J Houghton, G Rowe & L FrewerSRA-E, 10-13 September 2006, Ljubljana

Outline
Project background Research questions Study design Qualitative results Quantitative results Implications for food risk management
(FRM)

Background
EU 6th Framework Programme project Promoting Food Safety
through a New Integrated Risk Analysis Approach for Foods – SAFE FOODS
Aims to promote the safety of the European food chain
Reinforces EU policy framework of strengthening consumer confidence in food safety

Background
Work Package 4 Consumer confidence in food risk management
(FRM)

Research questions
How are current FRM practices perceived by various stakeholders? Consumers
Experts
How well do stakeholders understand one another’s views in relation to FRM?
What are the factors driving consumer confidence in FRM?

Study design
Multi-phase research programme, employing mixed methods
Five European countries Denmark
Germany
Greece
Slovenia
UK

Study design Qualitative phase
Focus groups
• Consumers
• Experts (food safety scientists, food risk assessors, food risk managers)
• Perceptions of effectiveness of current FRM practices
Follow-up interviews
• Focus group participants
• Confronted with each other’s views on FRM
• No follow-up interviews in Slovenia

Study design
Quantitative phase
Cross-national survey on consumers’ food risk management evaluations
Internet questionnaire (except Slovenia)
Items in survey informed by results from qualitative work
2533 consumer respondents in five countries
Representative in terms of gender, age and educational level

Qualitative results Focus groups - five key themes common to
consumer & expert participants’ perceptions of FRM Efforts
Responsibility
Priorities
Science
Media
Issues not represented in the same way by both groups

Qualitative results
Efforts made by the authorities to manage food risks
Existence of established systems of control
• “Systems in place”, “prompt action”, “rigorous enforcement”
• Experts more positive in their evaluations
Instigation of preventive measures
Provision of information and education
• Trade off between education & “information overload”

Qualitative results Responsibility
Consumer views related to perceived level of control over exposure to risk
Experts emphasised the importance of everyone in the food chain taking responsibility for their role in the process of FRM
Priorities - is consumer health protection prioritised in FRM? Experts, in general, believe it is Consumers are not so sure

Qualitative results Science – scientific progress and its
implications for FRM Consumer participants – concerns about
“constant race” and “vicious circle” Expert participants – concerns about complexity
and “emerging” or “hidden” risks Media - the impact of media attention of
FRM Positive and negative associations
• What’s being done. What’s gone wrong
Experts blamed media for making consumers unnecessarily worried about food safety

Qualitative results Follow-up interviews
Often agreement with expressed viewsReasons for agreement different – for
example …
Consumers’ lack knowledge about
food safety
Authorities make efforts to manage
food risks
CONSUMER VIEW
Due to quality of information
Continuing problems & areas not covered
EXPERT VIEW
Consumers’ lack willingness to acquire information
FRM adequate and consumers happy

Quantitative study: data analysis
The constructsProactive consumer protectionOpaque and reactive risk managementScepticism in risk assessment and risk
communication practicesTrust in expertise of food risk managersTrust in honesty of food risk managers

Quantitative resultsProactiv
e
Opaque
Sceptical
Trust inhonesty
Trust inexpertise
FRMquality
item1
item2
item3
item4
item7
item8
item13
item14
item17
item18
item28
item29
item33
Measurement model
(2(2400)=7834, p<0.01; RMSEA=0.07).

Quantitative resultsProactiv
e
Opaque
Sceptical
Trust inhonesty
Trust inexpertise
FRMquality
Structural model
(2(2420)=8429, p<0.01; RMSEA=0.07).

Quantitative results
One of the measurement scales
Pro-active consumer protection
There is an established system for controlling food risks
The authorities will respond quickly if a food safety problem appears
The authorities put a lot of effortinto preventing food risks
Food safety laws are stringentlyenforced by the authorities

Quantitative study: data analysis
Cross-national validity of measurement instrumentConfigural and metric invariance across
countries Country differences in regression
coefficientsSeries of nested structural equation models
was tested

Quantitative results: no country differences
(-0.11*)
(*p<0.05)
(0.01)
Proactive
Opaque
Sceptical
Trust inhonesty
Trust inexpertise
FRMquality

Quantitative results: country differences Proactiv
e
Sceptical
Trust inexpertise
FRMquality
(0. 51*) (0. 27*) (1.97*) (0. 57*) (0. 45*)
(-0.22) (-0.34*) (-0.30*) (-0.16*) (-0.71)
(*p<0.05)(0.57*) (0.99*) (0.30) (0.87*) (0.94*)
Opaque
Trust in honesty

Quantitative results
Factors of universal importance related to food risk management quality evaluations: Pro-active consumer protection Opaque and reactive risk management Trust in the expertise of food risk managers
(except Greece) Factors of local importance related to food
risk management quality evaluations: Scepticism in risk assessment and
communication practices

Implications for FRM
For communication Provide the right consumers with the right
information through the right source For management
Provide proactive communication about various factors inherent in risk management and risk assessment
Incorporate the views and opinions of all stakeholders in the process of risk analysis
Understand consumer concerns

Thank you!