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What should (and shouldn’t) happen during a food recall

What should (and shouldn’t) happen during a food recall
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— OPINION —

By Roger Hancock, CEO of Recall InfoLink

Food recalls occur regularly, with recent incidents involving eggs, tomatoes, cucumbers,  baby food, and more. A food safety report found an alarming increase in food recalls last year, and as these incidents continue, consumer trust in food safety has dropped to an all-time low.

Recalls happen — even to companies that consistently follow proper food safety protocols. A restaurant could unknowingly serve onions that were contaminated at the farm before they arrived. Or a grocery store could sell deli meats, unaware that the products were contaminated at the processing plant.

More important than who’s at fault is how a company manages the situation, whether they were the one who issued the recall or not. Are they:

Recalls are meant to protect consumers, but the process doesn’t always work the way it should. Here’s what a good recall looks like, and what to watch for when things aren’t handled properly.

What should happen during a food recall
This is what you want to see during a well-managed recall — it means the system is working to keep you safe.

What shouldn’t happen during a food recall
This is what you don’t want to see during a recall — if you do, it likely means things aren’t being handled well. Food companies might want to pay attention to this part, too.

While the U.S. food supply remains the safest in the world, recalls continue. Since recalls are issued to protect public health, not necessarily due to a brand failure, don’t fault a company for recalling products. However, watch how the company manages and communicates about the recall. Companies should act quickly, communicate transparently, share accurate messages, provide clear instructions, and work proactively to minimize risks and protect consumer health.

About the author: Roger Hancock, CEO of Recall InfoLink, is one of the world’s foremost experts on recalls, with experience that spans the retail, tech, data, regulatory, and supply chain. Recall InfoLink, makes recalls faster, easier, and more accurate across the supply chain to protect consumers and brands. As the only company focused entirely on recalls.

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