Consumer food storage practices and methods at the household-level: a community study in Ghana
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Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Abstract
Introduction: Household-level food storage can make food available to
consumers, and promotes food security. Nevertheless, attention is mostly
devoted to enhancing food storage at the farmer and national levels, neglecting
the household level. It is therefore critical to assess food storage practices of
households. This study examined food storage practices of households, evaluated
expert opinions on household-level food storage, and assessed the effect
household characteristics has on food storage and food security.
Methods: Dzorwulu and Jamestown communities in Accra, Ghana, were chosen
as the study locations. The study consisted of a survey, expert interviews and
structural equation modeling. For the survey, 400 food household heads selected
using systematic sampling method responded to a semi-structured questionnaire.
Seventeen (17) experts were also purposively sampled and interviewed.
Results and Discussion: The results showed that, most households stored
foodstuffs they often consumed, with generally low storage of fruits and
vegetables. Perishable foods such as cassava, tomato, yam, and banana were
stored by 37.8, 42, 38.3 and 43.8% of households, respectively, for 1–3 days.
Households often stored food within a period of 2 weeks, due to poor storage
facilities and lack of food storage knowledge. About 85.8% of households had
never received training on food storage. Most households used baskets, bowls,
sacks and polyethylene bags to store food at home, and some used refrigerators
and deep freezers. Regarding the link between food storage and food security,
household heads’ income showed a significant positive moderating effect (p≤ 0.01),
households’ socioeconomic status had a positive effect, while household size
indicated a significant negative moderating effect (p≤ 0.01). The experts asserted
that, household-level food storage enhances food security and food safety, and
reduces food expenditure and food wastage. The limited food storage knowledge
of households should be a basis for intervention to enhance proper food storage
practices within households.
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Research Article
Citation
CITATION Afriyie E, Zurek M, Asem FE, Okpattah B, Ahiakpa JK and Zhu Y-G (2023) Consumer food storage practices and methods at the household-level: a community study in Ghana. Front. Sustain. Food Syst. 7:1194321. doi: 10.3389/fsufs.2023.1194321