COVID-19 - ANSES's recommendations on food, shopping and cleaning
What precautions should I take after going shopping? Does food need to be cooked to destroy the virus? Can I eat fruits and vegetables raw without any further preparation? ANSES examined the possibilities of the COVID-19 disease being transmitted via food, on the basis of the available scientific data. Here are our answers to the most frequently asked questions.
Following the lead of the French Ministry of Health and the Regional Health Agencies, ANSES has offered the protective equipment and reagents it had available to hospitals near its 16 sites, to help equip healthcare workers and perform SARS-CoV2 diagnostic tests. ANSES's employees are also working to assist the coordination of research programmes on the disease, provide the Directorate General for Health with their expertise on diagnostic kits, and support hospitals.
Get moving at home! Regular physical activity helps improve your health
During this period of lockdown due to the current unprecedented health crisis in the country, it is essential to keep up regular physical activity in your home . Aerobic exercises, muscle strengthening, relaxation: all these forms of daily physical activity can be practised at home using the means available (a chair, filled water bottles, etc.) and will help improve your health.
Response to emerging diseases: rethinking global health monitoring
Does the arrival of COVID-19 mean we need to rethink our health monitoring systems? And how can we identify new epidemic warning signs at an early stage? These are the questions currently being addressed by European and North American researchers specialising in emerging diseases (most of which originate in animals), as part of the MOOD project, which started in January 2020. Epidemiologists from ANSES's Lyon Laboratory are contributing to this H2020 project, which brings together 25 research institutes* and public health agencies, and is being coordinated by CIRAD.
COVID-19 cannot be transmitted by either farm animals or domestic animals
When asked about potential transmission of the COVID-19 disease via contaminated domestic animals or food, ANSES urgently convened an expert group to answer this question. On the basis of their report, the Agency concluded that in light of the scientific knowledge available, there is no evidence that pets and livestock play a role in the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus causing this disease. Any transmission through food would therefore necessarily imply contamination of that food by a patient or person infected with the virus, during handling or meal preparation. This could concern all types of foods (animal or plant products). Furthermore, while there is no evidence to suggest that consumption of contaminated food can lead to infection of the digestive tract, the possibility of the respiratory tract becoming infected during chewing cannot be completely ruled out. The Agency reiterates that cooking food and observing good hygiene practices when handling and preparing food are effective at preventing contamination with the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
ADEME and ANSES step up their cooperation to integrate human health concerns into climate change solutions
Arnaud Leroy, CEO of ADEME, and Roger Genet, Director General of ANSES, signed a framework agreement this week at the Paris International Agricultural Show. Its aim is to strengthen cooperation between the two public agencies in order to integrate human health issues into their scientific work and efforts to develop solutions to combat climate change. The four targeted priority areas for cooperation are air quality, the bioeconomy & food, polluted sites and the circular economy. This partnership reflects the agencies' shared desire for ever-closer coordination of their competence in scientific expert appraisal and research in the public interest.
ANSES and the IFCE strengthen their cooperation with a partnership agreement
Having found common ground through their concerns for equine health, ANSES and the IFCE today signed a partnership agreement at the Paris International Agricultural Show. It consolidates and strengthens the ways in which the two organisations work together in this field, while capitalising on their complementary skills.
ANSES and EnvA sign a scientific cooperation partnership agreement
Christophe Degueurce, Director of EnvA, and Roger Genet, Director General of ANSES, today signed a framework partnership agreement at the Paris International Agricultural Show. In doing so, the two organisations are formalising their long-standing cooperation and committing to advance scientific knowledge on animal infections to safeguard health for all.
The Central Fund for the Agricultural Mutual Insurance Scheme (MSA) and ANSES signed a framework partnership agreement today at the Paris International Agricultural Show, reflecting the desire of the two public interest organisations to combine their skills to protect worker health in the agricultural sector.