Good Personal Hygiene Is Key To The Prevention of Foodborne Illness. Good Personal Hygiene Includes
Good Personal Hygiene Is Key To The Prevention of Foodborne Illness. Good Personal Hygiene Includes
Good Personal Hygiene Is Key To The Prevention of Foodborne Illness. Good Personal Hygiene Includes
Good personal hygiene is key to the prevention of foodborne illness. Good Personal Hygiene
includes:
Following hygienic hand practices
Maintaining personal cleanliness
Wearing clean and appropriate uniforms and following dress codes
Avoiding certain habits and actions
Maintaining good health
Reporting illnesses
Food handlers must wash their hands before they start work and after:
Proper handwashing:
1. Wet your hands and arms with running water as hot as you can comfortably stand (at least
100 F [38 C]).
2. Apply soap. Apply enough soap to build up a good lather.
3. Scrub hands and arms vigorously for 10 to 15 seconds. Lather well beyond the wrists,
including the exposed portions of the arms. Clean under fingernails and between fingers. A
nailbrush might be helpful.
4. Rinse hands and arms thoroughly under running water.
5. Dry hands and arms with a single-use paper towel or warm-air hand dry. When leaving the
restroom, consider using a paper towel to turn off the faucet and to open the door.
Hand Antiseptics are liquids or gels that are used to lower the number of pathogens on skin. Once an
antiseptic is applied, food handlers should not touch food or equipment until the substance has dried.
Hand Maintenance
Hands need other regular care to ensure they will not contaminate food. To keep the food safe, make
sure food handlers follow these guidelines:
Single-Use Gloves
Gloves can help keep food safe by creating a barrier between hands and food. When purchasing gloves
for handling food, managers should:
Policies regarding eating, drinking, smoking, and chewing gum and tobacco
Small droplets of saliva can contain thousands of disease causing microorganisms. In the process of
eating, drinking, chewing gum or tobacco, or smoking, saliva can be transferred to a food handler’s
hands or directly to the food the person is handling. For this reason, food handlers must not do this
things while working in food-preparation areas or while working in areas used to clean utensils and
equipment.
Some jurisdictions allow employees to drink from covered container with a straw while in this areas.
Check with your local regulatory agency. Food handlers should do this things at the employees break
room. Employees should never be allowed to spit in the establishment.
If food must be tasted during preparation, it must be placed in a separate dish and tasted with a clean
utensil. The dish and utensil should then be removed from the food preparation area for cleaning and
sanitizing.