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Providing Safe Food

Providing Safe Food. ServSafe Essenitals. Foodborne illness – disease transmitted to people by food Foodborne illness outbreak – two or more people get the same illness after eating the same food Each year MILLIONS of people get sick from unsafe food. Challenges to Food Safety.

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Providing Safe Food

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  1. Providing Safe Food ServSafeEssenitals

  2. Foodborne illness – disease transmitted to people by food • Foodborne illness outbreak – two or more people get the same illness after eating the same food • Each year MILLIONS of people get sick from unsafe food.

  3. Challenges to Food Safety • Time and Money • Language and culture • Literacy and education • Pathogens • Unapproved suppliers • High-risk customers • Staff turnover

  4. Cost of Foodborne Illnesses • Loss of customers and sales • Loss of reputation • Negative media exposure • Lowered staff morale • Lawsuits and legal fees • Staff missing work • Increase insurance premiums • Staff retraining

  5. Cost of Foodborne Illnesses • Most importantly victims of illnesses may experience lost work, medical costs, long-term disability, and even death.

  6. Populations at High Risk of Illness • Elderly • Infants and preschool-age children • Pregnant women • Other • Cancer or chemotherapy • HIV/AIDS • Transplant recipients

  7. Potential Hazards • Biological – greatest threat • Viruses, parasites, fungi, and bacteria • Chemical • Cleaners, sanitizers, polishes, machine lubricants, toxic metals • Physical • Foreign objects – hair, dirt, bandages, metal staples, broken glass • Naturally occurring objects – fish bones

  8. How Food Becomes Unsafe • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) identified the 5 most common risk factors: • Purchasing food from unsafe sources • Failing to cook food adequately • Holding food at incorrect temperatures • Using contaminated equipment • Practicing poor personal hygiene

  9. Time-temperature abuse – Food has been time-temperature abused when it has stayed too long at temperatures that are good for the growth of pathogens. • Food is not held or stored at the right temperature. • Food is not cooked or reheated enough to kill pathogens. • Food is not cooled the right way.

  10. Cross-contamination – pathogens can be transferred from one surface or food to another. • Contaminated ingredients are added to food that receives no further cooking. • Ready to eat food touches contaminated surfaces. • Contaminated food touches or drips fluids onto cooked or ready to eat food. • Contaminated cleaning towels touch food-contact surfaces.

  11. P0or personal hygiene • Fail to wash hands the right way after using the restroom or any time their hands get dirty. • Come to work while sick. • Cough or sneeze on food. • Touch or scratch wounds and then touch food.

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