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New Publications from ILSI Europe

Published/Copyright: September 1, 2009
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New Books and Publications

New Publications from ILSI Europe

Recycling of Plastics for Food Contact Use

As more packaging options are proposed for food and beverage products, the opportunities to reuse materials, especially plastics, for these purposes are growing as well. The quality and safety aspects of recycling technologies thus need to be carefully examined for the major polymer types. Plastics recycling technology for food purposes clearly must remove potential chemical contaminants to an acceptable level of safety that addresses public health concerns. With this in mind, the ILSI Europe Packaging Material Task Force convened a workshop in London (UK) in March 1997 to examine the scientific database on the safe recycling of plastics for food contact use. The discussions of the experts participating in the workshop and subsequent meetings to produce guidelines and recommendations on the subject appear in a new publication in the ILSI Europe Report Series. It covers recycling operations, feedstock for recycling, challenge tests and surrogates, as well as migration test conditions and limits.

All ILSI Europe publications are available upon written request (E-mail: marc@ilsieurope.be).

Functional Food Science in Europe

In response to concerns from the scientific community worldwide about recent developments in the understanding of the functional food concept, ILSI Europe elaborated, in 1995, a project proposal for a European Commission Concerted Action aimed at establishing a science-based approach for the concept. The goal of this concerted action was to establish a multidisciplinary European network to (1) critically assess the science base required to provide evidence that specific nutrients positively affect physiological functions, (2) examine the available science from a function-driven rather than a nutrient-driven point of view, and (3) reach a consensus on targeted modifications of food and food constituents and options for their application.

To attain these objectives, a First Plenary Meeting was organized in 1996 in Nice (France) to assess the state of the science. Based on the results of this meeting, six areas in human physiology were identified: development, growth, and differentiation; substrate metabolism (including metabolic aspects of physical activity); defense against reactive oxidative species; cardiovascular system; gastrointestinal physiology and functions; and behavioral and psychological functions. Individual Theme Groups (ITGs) composed of industry and nonindustry scientists were established to produce theme papers that would critically review the science base of the functional food concept in each area. The exercise focused on characterizing specific body systems, assessing methodologies, identifying nutritional options to modulate functions, evaluating potential safety implications, examining the role of technology, critically assessing the required science base, and suggesting areas where further research is needed. The resulting documents were scrutinized in a Second Plenary Meeting in 1997, in Helsinki (Finland), and have now been published as a supplement to the British Journal of Nutrition.

All ILSI Europe publications are available upon written request (E-mail: marc@ilsieurope.be).

Food Safety Management Tools

Throughout the world, food manufacturing, distribution, and retailing is becoming a highly complex business. Raw materials are traded on a global scale, an ever-increasing number of processing technologies are used, and a vast array of products are available to the consumer.

Such a complexity necessitates the development of comprehensive control procedures to ensure the production of safe, high-quality food.

Despite progress in medicine, food science, and the technology of food production, illness caused by foodborne pathogens continues to present a major problem of both health and economic significance. A new report describes several tools to use in an integrated approach to the management of food safety, such as elements of Good Manufacturing Practice (GMP), the importance of applying HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point) within a GMP framework, and a quality management system as a means of effectively managing total product quality. Although the primary focus of this report is microbiological issues, the general principles addressed are applicable to the management of chemical and physical contaminants as well.

This publication, in the ILSI Europe Report Series, was undertaken under the auspices of the ILSI Europe Risk Analysis in Microbiology Task Force.

All ILSI Europe publications are available upon written request (E-mail: marc@ilsieurope.be).

Published Online: 2009-09-01
Published in Print: 1999-03

© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Bioinformatics and the Internet
  2. IUPAC–NIST Solubility Data Series
  3. IUPAC, IUPHAR, and IUTOX Report on Natural and Anthropogenic Environmental Oestrogens: The Scientific Basis for Risk Assessment
  4. A New NMR Data Standard for the Exchange and Archiving for Multidimensional Data Sets
  5. Present Status of Science in Cuba: Focus on Chemistry
  6. Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE) of the International Council for Science (ICSU)
  7. Water Pollution Management in India (VI.3)
  8. Final Report on the Design and Field Testing of a Teaching Package for Environmental Chemistry (CTC)
  9. Fatty Acids
  10. Metabolic Pathways of Agrochemicals
  11. Benefit-Risk Balance for Marketed Drugs: Evaluating Safety Signals, Report of CIOMS Working Group IV
  12. Guidelines for Drinking-Water Quality, Second Edition, Addendum to Volume 1: Recommendations
  13. Toxicological Evaluation of Certain Veterinary Drug Residues in Food
  14. Pesticide Residues in Food 1997, Part I: Toxicological and Environmental Evaluations
  15. Boron
  16. Guide to Drug Financing Mechanisms
  17. New Publications from ILSI Europe
  18. Other Books and Publications
  19. National Profile to Assess the Chemicals Management in Slovenia
  20. Commission on High-Temperature Materials and Solid State Chemistry (II.3)
  21. Maison de la Chimie Foundation Prize
  22. King Faisal International Prize
  23. James Economy Wins American Chemical Society Mark Award
  24. 12th International Symposium on Polymer Analysis and Characterization (ISPAC-12), 28–30 June 1999, La Rochelle, France
  25. 13th Bratislava International Conference on Polymers: Separation and Characterization of Macromolecules, 4–9 July 1999, Bratislava, Slovakia
  26. 17th ICHC International Congress of Heterocyclic Chemistry, 1–6 August 1999, Vienna, Austria
  27. 58th Chemical Conference and Exhibition and 7th Caribbean Chemical Conference, 3–6 August 1999, Hato Rey, Puerto Rico
  28. 4th International Symposium on Philosophy, History, and Education in Analytical Chemistry, 3–4 September 1999, Vienna, Austria
  29. Symposium on Common Themes in Transcription and RNA Processing, 6–8 September 1999, Buenos Aires, Argentina
  30. 113th AOAC International Annual Meeting and Exposition, 26–30 September 1999, Houston, Texas, USA
  31. 8th International Conference on Multiphoton Processes, 3–8 October 1999, Monterey, California, USA
  32. Conference Calendar
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