# Food Safety in the Catering Sector: Nonconformities, Challenges, and Strategic Interventions With Insights From South Asia and Africa

**Authors:** Anwar Ali, Aleena Tahir, Nazir Ahmed, Joanna Trafialek, Basim M. Alohali, Isam A. Mohamed Ahmed, Muhammad Faisal Manzoor, Felix Kwashie Madilo

PMC · DOI: 10.1002/fsn3.71400 · 2026-01-05

## TL;DR

This review highlights food safety challenges in the catering sector, especially in South Asia and Africa, and suggests strategies like training and AI to reduce foodborne diseases.

## Contribution

The paper provides a focused review of food safety issues and interventions in catering, emphasizing South Asia and Africa with global implications.

## Key findings

- Foodborne diseases are prevalent due to poor hygiene, waste management, and training in catering sectors.
- Cross-contamination and improper handwashing are major contributors to food safety issues.
- AI and improved training are proposed as effective strategies to enhance food safety compliance.

## Abstract

Food safety in the catering sector is an essential public health issue, as foodborne diseases (FBDs) continue to pose significant threats worldwide. This review explores the challenges in food safety and hygiene in catering businesses, focusing on shortcomings in personal hygiene, waste management, equipment sanitation, water supply, and temperature regulation. Although regulatory frameworks and food safety guidelines are in place, implementation gaps remain due to insufficient training, inadequate infrastructure, and poor adherence to rules. The review presents global statistics on FBDs, highlighting their significant prevalence in Asia, Africa, and even developed countries, primarily due to poor food safety practices and regulatory gaps. Primary concerns include cross‐contamination, improper handwashing, and inadequate waste disposal, further aggravated by limited resources and lack of awareness. Strategies aimed at improvement include promoting a food safety culture, using artificial intelligence (AI) for monitoring, enhancing staff training, and investing in high‐quality equipment. Tackling these issues requires collaborative efforts among stakeholders, including policymakers, food handlers, and regulatory agencies, to ensure compliance and reduce the incidence of FBDs. This review emphasizes the critical need for comprehensive interventions to protect public health and improve food safety standards in catering operations worldwide. This review emphasizes South Asia and Africa, where foodborne diseases remain most severe, with special relevance in some developed countries.

Urgent attention to global food safety in catering is necessary to address hygiene, training, and tech‐based strategies to counter foodborne diseases.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** FBDs (MESH:D005517)

## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766577/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12766577