%0 Journal Article %T The Importance Placed on the Monitoring of Food Safety and Quality by Australian Consumers %A Julie Henderson %A Loreen Mamerow %A Anne W. Taylor %A Paul R. Ward %A Samantha B. Meyer %A John Coveney %J Laws %D 2013 %I MDPI AG %R 10.3390/laws2020099 %X Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) estimates that Australians experience 5.4 million incidents of food poisoning each year, making food safety a significant public health issue. This paper describes and analyses the importance placed by Australians on the role of the agencies and actors that regulate the safety and quality of food. A computer assisted telephone interviewing survey addressing aspect of food safety was administrated to a random sample of 1,109 participants across all Australian states (response rate 41.2%). Only 44.6% of participants viewed the monitoring of food safety and quality as ¡®Very important¡¯, with greatest significance placed upon personal monitoring (76.0%) and the role of the Federal government (51.1%). The media (22.5%) and local council (32.4%) were viewed as the least important agents. When data were combined to create an index of general monitoring, participants under 30; respondents in outer regional areas; and men identified food monitoring as less important; while respondents from households with 5 or more members viewed food monitoring as more important than respondents from smaller£¿households. %K food safety %K food regulation %K survey %K public health %K Australia %U http://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/2/2/99