“Sometimes You Get Good Ones, and Sometimes You Get Not-so-Good Ones”: Vendors’ and Consumers’ Strategies to Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks in Urban Nigeria
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How do consumers and vendors identify and avoid or manage food safety risks in a market setting?
- Whom do vendors and consumers hold responsible and trust when it comes to ensuring food safety in market settings?
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. The Traditional Market as a Setting
3.2. How Do Consumers Avoid Unsafe Foods?
3.2.1. Choosing a “Clean” Vendor
I have one to two vendors that I buy things from, some of them look dirty and you won’t like to interact with such a person, so you go to another person. Some are neat but their goods are pricey… things are expensive, but one will still want a seller that you trust will not cheat you.–C1207, a 31-year-old female consumer[emphasis added]
There are people who are more hygienic than the others. There are some products I buy from my vendor, and there are products I buy from other people because of their hygienic level.–C1209, a 40-year-old male consumer[emphasis added]
[At the market], the only thing I look out for is when the place is clean. When the place is neat and very attractive, I’ll get what I want to get. If the environment and shop is unkempt, sometimes I doubt things from them, but it is clean and neat, I get things from there…. The person too should be clean… The outfits, and the neatness of the person, the personal hygiene of the person: you don’t go and meet with the person… [if he] looks as if he is from a mechanic workshop.–C2201, a 25-year-old male consumer
[To feel confident in the foods I buy, I look at] how he [the vendor] handles those stands, does he normally sweep… does he wash those bowls that he’s using …there are some people even the bowl will be up to 100 years, they will not wash it! They don’t mind how it’s being taken care of, what they are concerned about is money, how they will get money. So I’m being concerned about those things.–C2210, a 35-year-old female consumer
Some of them [the vendors], this spinach when they bring it, they just keep it on the ground and that ground is not a clean environment… when they keep it on the ground people step on it and also the ground it dirty, after picking it they will not wash it they will just pick it and put it on top of the table, so that spinach has already be contaminated with disease on the ground.–C2211, a 40-year-old female consumer
3.2.2. Recognizing Unsafe Foods
Sometimes you get good ones, and sometimes you get bad ones. Every day is not Sallah [Eid al-Fitr] or Christmas day. That’s a market for you.–C2204, a 40-year-old female consumer
Sometimes when I go to the market to buy beans [cowpea] and I noticed the beans has many holes on it or weevils, I don’t buy it. I prefer to buy something good…. I think when one buys beans that are weevil infested, it is very possible that after eating, it will cause one to be stooling. [Also] when I notice the chemicals in beans is too much, I don’t buy it. Because when the chemical is too much, it has bad effect on the beans.–C1205, a 53-year-old male consumer
I have one [vendor], I always prefer buying rice from him because he is also very honest. Anytime I want to buy ‘stone free’ rice, he has always given me the assurance that what he will give me has no stones…. So, once I get home, I will be expecting to hear complaints about the rice after cooking it, like the normal complaints when I buy rice that has stones, but to my surprise, no one will have anything bad to say about the rice.–C1211, a 38-year-old male consumer
Yes, and when I noticed a food vendor is very neat, and always drives away dust from his meat, then it shows that the meat will be good…. I will take a good look at the meat seller to know if he is neat, and I will also look at the environment, then the way the meat is being displayed. I take note of all that. But if it happens that I send someone to get it, I will not know anything much, and we may end up just cooking it. Like I said earlier, if I buy from those I trust, I have nothing to worry about.–C1205, a 53-year-old male consumer
When I am buying fish, I take note of how they react inside the water. If they move very fast and are lively inside the water, it means such a fish is healthy. But when you notice a very dull fish in the water, it shows that fish is sick, and I don’t go for that fish. And to know a harmful or dead fish even when they have already cut it, there is a foam-like whitish substance that comes out of the mouth. So, when I noticed such, I don’t allow them to sell it to me. There are things I am very careful to note when buying fish.–C1211, a 38-year-old male consumer
Some of the fresh fish, when you look at the rubber the fish were inside, the water will be dirty. Some of the vendors keep their fish in rubber with water that is clean. You will see the fish swimming about. Then I select the one that I want. And then the table the vendors use in cutting the fish, some of the vendors will use it to cut their fish and flies will be swarming on the table. While some of the vendors, if they use their table, they make sure that they clean the table. You will not know if they use the table or not. Because it will be clean.–C2212, a 30-year-old female consumer
If the vegetable looks good, I will buy it, but if it has patches of holes and insect bites, I won’t buy it. And also the ways I know if they are good or not is from the color: if it is very greenish, then it is good, but if it looks yellowish, then it is bad.–C1205, a 53-year-old male consumer
Check if it has holes or not, the size of the leaf, if it is too big it means it has a lot of fertilizer, so it means it doesn’t have the nutrients required… the more attractive it looks, the more problems it has because it means it has a lot of fertilizers.–C2216, a 50-year-old female consumer
When the leaf is red in color, the vegetable is bad, but when it is green and fresh it is good. The reason why it turns out to be reddish in color could be as a result of the fertilizers applied…. I can’t really say if the red vegetables can cause harm, but it is better to go for the fresh ones.–C1202, a 24-year-old female consumer
[When buying GLV, one should] check the neatness of the environment and the person you’re buying from… The table that they put the vegetables [needs] to be clean, and they should use a sack to cover the vegetables; at least they should cover it from all the dust that carries all these diseases, and it will maintain the green leaves from morning till evening.–C2211, a 40-year-old female consumer
[One] should look at how well arranged the table is: they should not just join lettuce and spinach and moringa in one place, the moringa should be in its own place, the lettuce, and the remaining vegetables.–C2202, a 31-year-old male consumer
3.2.3. Coping with Unsafe Foods
For me, I normally use salt to rinse the beef before boiling it. I rinse it like 2 to 3 times. After rinsing it, I add Maggi seasoning, curry, thyme, etc., to reduce the smell of the meat, if it has any, and that’s it, it becomes safe.–C1216, a 28-year-old female consumer
…there’s a way a mother can put in place to reduce the risk of diarrhea, that is, by proper washing of vegetables and fruits. When you buy beef from the market, the first thing when you come back is to wash using vinegar.… it kills unseen germs, that’s what vinegar is used for; in a place where there is no vinegar, you use salt.…–C2210, a 35-year-old female consumer
3.2.4. Learning about Food Safety
…on radio and television, they usually talk about food hygiene, environmental cleanliness, and the need for pregnant women to always eat body-building food… I also get informed from friends, but one cannot verify the information, if it is true or false. We only accept it as it is…. There was a time I was told that there are beans with chemicals that can cause harm to the body. When I heard about it, I stopped buying beans so as not to fall a victim.–C1205, a 53-year-old male consumer
I heard that eating unhealthy fish can cause bodily harm on a radio show. They informed us that eating an unhealthy fish will make one fall sick. But I don’t even know how to identify unhealthy fish, so all that we are discussion here now is just my personal thoughts…I may be wrong please, so you don’t say I’m misleading you.–C1214, a 30-year-old man
3.3. How Do Vendors Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks?
3.3.1. Recognizing Unsafe Food
Yes, [consumers complain about] beans [cowpea], once they discover it has pests, they complain. Me, I hardly [ever] buy beans that have pests, I prefer not having [them] than to have the ones that has pests. So, they complain about that.–V1110, a 38-year-old grain and legume vendor
[Consumers’ second-most-common complaint is] sorghum that has stones, and soybeans…. When I get complaints like that … what I do is after coming back from where I buy, outside Kebbi, we get laborers to select the stones out of the grains…. I will tell [customers] I am sorry; it is something that will not happen again, and that you are trying your best to bring something good for sale in the market.–V1110, a 38-year-old grain and legume vendor
If you discover that the meat looks soft, honestly the meat is not safe to eat. But if the meat looks high quality…just take a look at that meat, is there any way you can say that you didn’t enjoy the meat? Is there a way they will give you this meat and you will say you didn’t enjoy eating it? You will enjoy it because you know the quality… But if the animal is sick…it will look like this…not attractive.–V1105, a 35-year-old beef vendor
Meat with dirt is not healthy … because the business requires neatness. From where we buy up to where we sell, needs to be clean. It’s not healthy if the color changes: maybe it’s left-over meat and the person did not take good care of the meat, the color will be kind of dark.–V1112, a 25-year-old beef vendor
3.3.2. Avoiding and Mitigating Food Safety and Quality Issues
There are challenges we face from this business. An example is, when every fish you have is dead, you will end up selling them for even less than you bought them. People love buying fish that are killed in their presence. But when you have fish that are already dead, you will have to convince someone to buy the fish and give the person confidence that the fish is still in good condition.–V2115, a 40-year-old fish vendor
Seriously, I really used to make a profit in this business, and I’m proud of the business I am into. But there are times you enjoy the business—that is when you sell and make profit—and times you will not want to do this business, especially during heat. It’s hard to maintain the freshness of the vegetables because of the hotness of the weather.–V2121, a 25-year-old GLV vendor
What is important to consider during business is that I look for a healthy animal, that I won’t be doubting when buying it. And, again, if I come to where to sell it, I will still check if the animal is healthy before slaughtering it, because if it’s not healthy, then there will be plenty of trouble, and I don’t want that.–V1112, a 25-year-old beef vendor
If I know my fish is not healthy or good, I worry that customers will not use it and [will] start complaining. If I see any sign of fish that has a problem, I do not buy… I prefer not to buy to harming shoppers.–V1111, a 55-year-old fish vendor
If I discover that the meat is not good for consumption, I will not buy it… I choose good meat so that I will be able to sell good meat to my customers, so that they will visit me again. I would not like to sell bad meat to my customers. It will scare them away, and they will not come back to me again tomorrow… There are people who [buy potentially harmful meat], but I don’t.–V1105, a 35-year-old beef vendor
3.4. Who Is Seen as Responsible for Food Safety?
Well, they [vendors] can sell anything they like, because we are not the sellers, we only buy from them. You know a vendor will never bring beef to the market and say the beef he has for sale is unsafe. They can only say it is good… They can’t tell, since they’re in a business, everyone wants to sell their products, so they will never tell the consumer if anything is wrong with it.–C1201, a 30-year-old female consumer
Well, I don’t think they [vendors] know [whether the fish they are selling is safe]. They don’t because most that sells fish, they are…permit me to use the word, illiterates. And their eyes are closed. Their own is just for them to look for money. So, they don’t care if it is safe or unsafe for the consumers.–C1209, a 40-year-old male consumer
Sometimes you get good ones, sometimes you get not-too-good ones. For example, old [beef] stock that has been kept in the fridge overnight and brought out in the morning to be sold as fresh beef. Very bad. The same with killing of sick animals. The sickly animals are slaughtered because the meat sellers want to make money while no one is considering the people that will buy it to eat.–C2204, a 40-year-old female consumer
If they [vendors] can reduce the way the flies perch on the vegetables it will be very good… Because you don’t know where the flies had perched, and they will stay on the vegetables and people will come and buy…. They should make sure the place is not smelly and it is clean.–C2201, a 25-year-old male consumer
Vendors should by all means make sure they slaughter the animals [cows] themselves. Just like they do in other developed countries, the government should make sure there are teams of inspectors who inspect the abattoir daily to make sure what they are selling is safe for consumption.–C1209, a 40-year-old male consumer
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Ethical Statement
References
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Respondent Characteristics | |
Gender | Male (49%), female (51%) |
Average age (range) | 33.7 (22–64) |
Ethnicity | Hausa (47%), Zuru (30%), Fulani (15%), Igbo (6%), Other (9%) |
Religion | Muslim (62%), Christian (38%) |
Highest education completed | Primary (94%), Tertiary (53%) |
Marital status | Married (monogamous)—66%; married (polygamous)—6%; single—26%, widowed—2% |
Principal household income earner | 45% |
Occupation | Professional/Managerial—30%; Small business owner/entrepreneur—15%; Not employed outside home—23%; Sales/services employee—11%; Petty trader, hawker—6%; unskilled labor—2%, technical labor—9%, agriculture—4% |
Household Characteristics | |
Avg. household size (range) | 6.2 (1–19) |
Avg. number of children (range) | 2.6 (0–11) |
Home has electricity | 91% |
Pct. poor (1.90 PPP) * | 2% |
Pct. poor (3.10 PPP) * | 12% |
Household owns car | 32% |
Household owns mobile phone | 98% |
Household has improved toilet | 91% |
Farms or owns farmland | 55% |
Vendor Characteristics | |
---|---|
Percent male | 100% |
Average age (range) | 40 (22–65) |
Ethnicity | Hausa (95%), Fulani (5%) |
Religion | Muslim (100%) |
Pct. completing primary school | 51% |
Pct. completing secondary school | 22% |
Pct. completing tertiary school | 3% |
Avg. years vending (range) | 19.2 (5–43) |
Respondent is household’s principal income earner | 95% |
Respondent has another income source | 70% |
Other income sources | Farming or livestock (23); selling other food/goods (2); contractor (1) |
Market | Estimated Area | Estimated Number of Vendors | Toilet Facilities? | Water Facilities? | Garbage Facilities? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Main city market | 3800 m2 | About 1875; almost 90% male | Yes (commercial and public) | Yes | No |
Neighborhood market 1 | 500 m2 | About 200; about 80% male | No | No | No |
Neighborhood market 2 | 420 m2 | About 13; less than 50% female (all are teenagers selling rice) | No, but an incomplete building is used for urinating | No | No |
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Nordhagen, S.; Lee, J.; Onuigbo-Chatta, N.; Okoruwa, A.; Monterrosa, E.; Lambertini, E.; Pelto, G.H. “Sometimes You Get Good Ones, and Sometimes You Get Not-so-Good Ones”: Vendors’ and Consumers’ Strategies to Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks in Urban Nigeria. Foods 2022, 11, 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11020201
Nordhagen S, Lee J, Onuigbo-Chatta N, Okoruwa A, Monterrosa E, Lambertini E, Pelto GH. “Sometimes You Get Good Ones, and Sometimes You Get Not-so-Good Ones”: Vendors’ and Consumers’ Strategies to Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks in Urban Nigeria. Foods. 2022; 11(2):201. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11020201
Chicago/Turabian StyleNordhagen, Stella, James Lee, Nwando Onuigbo-Chatta, Augustine Okoruwa, Eva Monterrosa, Elisabetta Lambertini, and Gretel H. Pelto. 2022. "“Sometimes You Get Good Ones, and Sometimes You Get Not-so-Good Ones”: Vendors’ and Consumers’ Strategies to Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks in Urban Nigeria" Foods 11, no. 2: 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11020201
APA StyleNordhagen, S., Lee, J., Onuigbo-Chatta, N., Okoruwa, A., Monterrosa, E., Lambertini, E., & Pelto, G. H. (2022). “Sometimes You Get Good Ones, and Sometimes You Get Not-so-Good Ones”: Vendors’ and Consumers’ Strategies to Identify and Mitigate Food Safety Risks in Urban Nigeria. Foods, 11(2), 201. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11020201