Current Catalog


Book Description

First multi-year cumulation covers six years: 1965-70.




Report of the Twelfth Session of the Joint FAO/WHO Codex Alimentarius Commission, Rome, 17-28 April 1978


Book Description

ABSTRACT: The report outlines the activities and reports of committees of the Codex Alimentarius Commission's April, 1978 meeting. Reports were given on: 1) acceptance of codex pesticide standards by 116 member countries; 2) international organizations' activities on food standards; 3) FAO and WHO food standards. Status reports were presented by the coordinating committees on Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Europe. Guidelines, standards, food control, and consumer protection issues were given by expert committees on food labeling, food additives, pesticide residues, food hygiene, meat hygiene, methods of analysis and sampling, general principles, quick frozen foods, processed fruit and vegetables, processed meat products, fish and fishery products, fats and oils, edible ices, sugars, cocoa products and chocolate, foods for special dietary uses, soups and broths, milk and milk products, natural mineral waters, and meat. The commission decided to establish committees on cereal and cereal products and on vegetable proteins but not one on coffee and coffee products.







Report of the Session


Book Description




Accessions Bulletin


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National Union Catalog


Book Description

Includes entries for maps and atlases.




Food and Nutrition


Book Description




Sanitary Control of Food


Book Description

Abstract: A technical pamphlet for food policy makers and food sanitation engineers presents a final report and key discussion points of a 1981 meeting of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) on strategies for improving sanitary control to ensure food safety, and the PAHO resolutions resulting from these discussions. In addition to the final report, 2 major overview papers are included: the first highlights food production and sanitation problems in the Americas, and identifies and discusses 11 specific suggestions to overcome these problems; the second paper outlines the current situation in food sanitation in the Americas, and offers a number of strategies for reducing hazards associated with food from the point of its production up to its consumption. Resolutions derived from this meeting for countries in the Americas are enumerated.