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Title: Advancing workforce capacity in food safety and public health: A national training model to prevent disease and promote health equity
Authors: Stanley Chukwukelu, Chidinma I. Onyeibor, Ikechukwu Onwe, Chinyere E. Ekanem
Journal: International medical science research journal
Year: 2025
Volume: 5
Issue: 3
Language: en
Ensuring food safety and regulatory compliance is critical to public health protection, yet the United States faces a significant workforce shortage in food safety and public health professionals, particularly in underserved regions. As food systems become increasingly complex and globalized, the demand for professionals trained in food regulation, inspection, compliance technologies, and hazard mitigation is growing. However, many communities—especially rural areas and minority-owned food businesses—lack access to adequately trained personnel, increasing the risk of foodborne illness and regulatory non-compliance.
This manuscript addresses the urgent need to expand workforce capacity by proposing a scalable, equity-driven national training and certification model. The model targets underrepresented populations, small-to-medium food enterprises (SMEs), and minority-owned businesses that often face systemic barriers to hiring or retaining food safety experts. Through modular, competency-based education aligned with HACCP, FDA, and USDA standards, this initiative offers flexible delivery pathways including hybrid online instruction, in-person practical training, and community-based workforce partnerships. The proposed model integrates training in emerging technologies such as AI-enabled traceability, real-time compliance monitoring, and risk forecasting—ensuring that trainees are equipped to operate in digitally evolving food safety ecosystems. By fostering local talent pipelines and supporting inclusive career advancement, the initiative strengthens not only food regulatory systems but also health equity and community resilience. We discuss implementation strategies involving public-private partnerships, academic collaborations, and sustainable federal investment. Advancing workforce capacity in food safety is not just a technical imperative—it is a national priority with profound implications for health equity, economic opportunity, and the prevention of disease. This paper outlines a blueprint for action to modernize food safety education, elevate underrepresented voices, and build a resilient workforce that can meet the challenges of tomorrow’s food and public health landscape.
Keywords: Food Safety Workforce, Public Health Training, Regulatory Compliance, Health Equity, Workforce Innovation.
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