Knowledge and perceptions of consumers on safety of organic vegetables in Tanzania: A case study of Morogoro and Kinondoni Municipalities
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Date
2017
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Sokoine University of Agriculture
Abstract
In the previous decades, there has been an upsurge of use of pesticides on food produces.
Many consumers now perceive or are knowledgeable that consumption of organic
vegetables is healthier than consuming their corresponding items. A cross sectional study
was done to assess the awareness and perception of consumers regarding food safety in
Morogoro and Dar es Salaam. A total of 200 paticipants half from each segment were
interviewed using a constructed and pretested structured questionnaire. However, the
analysis was done to 192 residents, half from each study segment. Data analysis was done
through SPSS version 20. Scale liability was tested with Cronbach alpha. Descriptive
statistics was conducted to assess knowledge and perception among respondents. Multiple
regression analysis was conducted to determine factors that affected the consumers’ choice
and identify as well as the approaches used by them to avoid the consumption of unhealthy
foods. The majority of participants (81%) perceived that organic vegetables had better
taste than conventional vegetables. About 45.3% of the respondents perceived that organic
vegetables were more attractive than conventional vegetables. Most of them (95.8%)
perceived consumption of organic vegetables to be nontoxic than conventional vegetables.
There was no significant difference (P> 0.05) in perception of organic vegetables among
age groups. To avoid consumption of foods that were perceived perilous, physical
appearance was a common method used by most (52%, β = 0.493) consumers compared to
reading product labels (45.3%, β = 0.296), asking product information (38%, β = 0.434)
and product tasting (26%, β = 0.146). The low purchasing and consumption rates of
organic vegetables were significantly different (P< 0.05), affected by their perceived low
shelf life (β = 0.108), lack of uniqueness (β = 0.071) and unavailability in the market (β =
0.032). Most organic food growers (97%) needed an external participatory guarantee
system for liable market so that producers and investors cooperate with organic growers
for business-oriented aspects.
Description
A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF THE MASTERS OF SCIENCE IN
HUMAN NUTRITION OF SOKOINE UNIVERSITY OF AGRICULTURE.
MOROGORO, TANZANIA. 2017
Keywords
Knowledge perceptions, Consumer perceptions, Organic vegetables, Food safety, Morogoro Municipality, Kinondoni Municipality