Obesity in food handlers

Publication year: 1998

The object of this study was to determine whether obesity is an occupational hazard in food handlers. 309 persons who presented to two Barbadian group General Practices for food handling certification were studied. The results demonstrate that a majority of food handlers were obese (55.3 percent), more so than in population studies despite the relatively young age of the sample. The men 67/104 (64 percent) were just as obese as the women 104/175 (59.4 percent) and obesity was seen in the relatively young age groups, 30-39 (60.9 percent), 40-49 (75 percent) and 50-59 (69.7 percent). Among food handlers obesity was seen more frequently than in those with sedentary lifestyles 76/116 (65.5 percent) and in those who worked more than 10 years in the food handling industry 91/140 (65 percent). No association was found between obesity and use of alcohol or tobacco, but among the food handlers studied were many who demonstrated inaccurate perception of their body image, with 74 of the 190 who thought their weight to be O.K. actually measuring as obese (39 percent). Obesity is most likely an occupational hazard in food handlers. They work in an industry that is growing rapidly in Barbados as tourism services expand and as the local population adopts the western lifestyle of eating out more often. Food handlers are required by law to be certified annually as fit to work. It is important that doctors recognize the threat of obesity and use the opportunity of this annual examination to screen and intervene for this hazard.

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