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How to determine the shelf life of a ready-to-eat-food?
Safe food is food which is free of contaminants and will not cause illness or harm. Persons involved in food poisoning investigations often remark about the cleanliness of the premises responsible. If food hygiene is intended to ensure the safety of food and prevent food poisoning then it follows that hygiene is more than cleanliness: it involves all measures necessary to ensure the safety and wholesomeness of food during preparation, processing, manufacture, storage, transportation, distribution, handling, sale and supply. This involves:
Persons carrying on a food business have legal, commercial and moral obligations to provide safe food. The costs resulting from food poisoning can be very high, as are those from poor hygiene. These costs, both financial and social, fall on employers and employees as well as those persons who are ill. Costs for employers include:
Food employees may suffer by:
High-risk foods are ready-to-eat foods which, under favourable conditions, support the multiplication of pathogenic bacteria and are intended for consumption without treatment which would destroy such organisms. High-risk foods are most likely to be involved in cases of food poisoning. They are usually high in protein and moisture, requiring strict temperature control and protection from contamination and include:
These foods are rarely implicated in food poisoning and may be stored, suitably packaged, at ambient temperatures. They do not support the multiplication of food poisoning bacteria. Examples include:
Unfortunately, an increasing number of outbreaks of foodborne illness are attributed to the consumption of raw, ready-to-eat foods which are stored at ambient temperatures, for example, salad vegetables, melons, raspberries and unpasteurised apple juice. As these foods do not usually support the multiplication of pathogens, the organisms involved are capable of causing illness in very low numbers, for example, viruses, E. coli O157, shigella and parasites.
Salmonella outbreaks have been associated with cut melon, lettuce and apple juice. Lettuce, raspberries and apple juice have been the food vehicle for outbreaks of viral illness and E. coli O157. Sewage contamination or bad hygiene practices during harvesting are the most likely causes of outbreaks. Ready-to-eat raw foods should be washed, preferably disinfected and, as good practice, stored under refrigeration.
Raw foods are often contaminated with large numbers of food poisoning bacteria, for example, raw meat, milk, poultry, eggs and root vegetables contaminated with soil. If raw foods are perishable, they should be stored in a refrigerator separate from high-risk and ready-to-eat food. Raw food may present a serious risk of food poisoning if not heat-treated or cooked thoroughly, especially poultry, products made with raw egg, bivalves, such as oysters, and raw milk.
Food poisoning
Food poisoning is usually an acute illness resulting from eating contaminated or poisonous food. It excludes allergies to food or toxins. The symptoms normally include one or more of the following: abdominal pain, diarrhoea, vomiting, fever and nausea.
Gastroenteritis
This term is used to refer to an inflammation of the stomach and intestinal tract that normally results in diarrhoea.
Carriers
Carriers are people who show no symptoms of illness but excrete food poisoning or foodborne pathogens which may contaminate food, for example, salmonellae or shigellae. Organisms may be excreted intermittently.
Risk groups
Some groups of people have a much greater risk of getting food poisoning. Furthermore, the illness is likely to be more serious and death is more frequent. Risk groups include babies and very young children, the elderly, people already ill, pregnant women and unborn babies and those who are immunocompromised, for example, transplant patients and drug abusers.
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