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1xbet online sports betting fumble: Research finds 90 percent of home chefs contaminate food

Thursday, Jan. 29, 2015

MANHATTAN —If you're gearing up for a big Super Bowl bash, you might want to consult the best food-handling practices before preparing that feast. New research from Kansas State University finds that most home chefs drop the ball on 1xbet online sports betting .

In an effort to evaluate current 1xbet online sports betting messages, researchers at Kansas State University videotaped home chefs preparing a meal containing raw meat and a ready-to-eat fruit salad. The raw meat was inoculated with a nonpathogenic organism to trace contamination in the kitchen. The researchers found that 90 percent of the participants had contaminated their salad.

"Almost all of the fruit salads we analyzed contained levels of the tracer organism, which we were representing as being salmonella," said Randy Phebus, professor of 1xbet online sports betting at Kansas State University and one of the authors of the study "Consumer 1xbet online sports betting Handling Practices Lead to Cross-Contamination," recently published in the journal 1xbet online sports betting Protection Trends.

The purpose of the research — funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture 1xbet online sports betting and Inspection Service — was to determine which type of 1xbet online sports betting messaging resulted in the best food-handling practices. The 123 participants were divided into three groups. One group was given an education program on the four national 1xbet online sports betting Families campaign messages of clean, separate, cook and chill; one group viewed and discussed the Ad Council public service announcements focusing on the same four 1xbet online sports betting Families messages; and one group did not receive any 1xbet online sports betting training before preparing a meal.

"A lot of studies in the past have been surveys asking consumers how they do things in the kitchen, but we have found that those are rather unreliable," Phebus said. "When you actually videotape it and observe it, most consumers are doing a really bad job in terms of preventing 1xbet online sports betting contamination."

The study found that all participants made mistakes in the kitchen that could lead to potential foodborne illnesses. The researchers wiped down the kitchen after each participant prepared a meal, finding most participants tracked contaminations all around the kitchen, including on handles, countertops, faucets and trash cans. But contamination was especially prevalent on hand towels.

"We found that most people tried to wash their hands, but did it very ineffectively — either only using water or not washing for long enough," Phebus said. "By not washing their hands correctly, they spread contamination to the hand towels. They then go back to those towels multiple times and recontaminate themselves or the kitchen surfaces with those towels. It ultimately leads to contamination in the 1xbet online sports betting product."

Participants who received 1xbet online sports betting messages before cooking did slightly better at this task than those who received no messages, but the differences were subtle. This research highlights the difficult task for 1xbet online sports betting practitioners of not only informing consumers, but also changing their habits, Phebus said.

"Human behavior can be modified, but it's a very complicated effort to do that," Phebus said. "To get people to change habits can be a pretty daunting task."

This study was co-authored with Phebus by the following Kansas State University faculty members: Jeannie Sneed, professor of hospitality management and dietetics; Donka Milke, research assistant in animal sciences and industry; Kevin Sauer and Kevin Roberts, both associate professors in hospitality management and dietetics; and Dallas Johnson, professor emeritus of statistics. Also a study co-author was Diane Duncan-Goldsmith, program coordinator of 1xbet online sports betting at Iowa State University.

photo credit: Vanessa Pike-Russell via photopincc

Source

Randy Phebus
785-532-1215
phebus@k-state.edu

Written by

Lindsey Elliott
785-532-1546
lindseye@k-state.edu

At a glance

New research from Kansas State University finds that despite receiving 1xbet online sports betting messaging, a majority of home chefs still contaminate their food because of poor food-handling techniques.

Notable quote

"We found that most people tried to wash their hands but did it very ineffectively, either only using water or not washing for long enough. By not washing their hands correctly, they spread contamination to the hand towels and then go back to those towels multiple times and re-contaminate themselves or the kitchen surfaces with those towels. It ultimately leads to contamination in the 1xbet online sports betting product."

— Randy Phebus, professor of 1xbet online sports betting at Kansas State University