Food safety is an essential public health issue for all countries. In recent years a number of extremely outbreaks of foodborne diseases have occurred. Many of these outbreaks have involved more than one country, and some more than one continent. Policy-makers and consumers in many countries are re-evaluating their strategy for food safety and the international aspects of public health within that strategy. In every part of the world people wage a constant battle against food contamination, foodborne diseases, and food wastage. Efforts to reduce these survival- threatening, devastating consequences of food contamination certainly started in prehistoric times. Cooking, smoking and simple sun drying were probably the first method used. Other more sophisticated technologies came along like fermentation and canning. More recently, advanced technologies in food preservation and packaging have been developed to make our food safer. However, despite these advanced in food science and technology, the safety of our food supply is at the beginning of the third millennium, still a cause of concern.
The term “safe food” represents different ideals to different audiences. Consumers, special interest groups, regulators, industry, and academia will have their unique descriptions based on their perspectives. Much of the information the general public receives about food safety comes through the media. For this reason, media perspectives on the safety of the food supply can influence those of the general public.
On the other hand, the terms food safety and food quality can sometimes be confusing. Food safety refers to all those hazards, whether chronic or acute, that may make food injurious to the health of the consumer. It is not negotiable. Quality includes all other attributes that influence a product’s value to the consumer. This includes negative attributes such as spoilage, contamination with filth, discoloration, off-odors and positive attributes such as the origin, color, flavor, texture and processing method of the food. This distinction between safety and quality has implications for public policy and influences the nature and content of the food control system most suited to meet predetermined national objectives.
Food safety is used as a scientific discipline describing handling, preparation, and storage of food in ways that prevent food-borne illness. It also referred to the conditions and practices that preserve the quality of food to prevent contamination and food-borne illness. While FAO defined the food safety is about handling, storing, and preparing food to prevent infection and to help make sure that our food keeps enough nutrients for us to have healthy diet.
Food can become contaminated at any point during production, distribution, and prepration. Everyone along the production chain, from producer to consumer, has a role to play to ensure the food we eat does not cause diseases.
No one likes experiencing nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or abdominal pain, but according to the Center for Disease Control (CDC) and Prevention*, an estimated 48 million people in the US get sick from a foodborne illness every year. This results in 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths. Since children under 5 have less-developed immune systems and lower body weights, they experience high rates of food-borne illnesses. People can become ill from foodborne illnesses in a number of ways.
Often, contaminated food does not look bad or spoiled and does not taste different. This makes it more difficult to identify when food has been contaminated and may make us or others sick.
Every food Establishment uses, processes, and sells food in different ways. However, the general issues and key principles of food safety remain the same, whatever the style of the operation. All food safety training programs should contain the “big three” factors that could cause food to become unsafe. Food must be kept out of harm’s way from human errors, but if you don’t train food workers what they are, they won’t know why these factors are so important to your operation. The basics can make us or break us in one or maybe two food handling mistakes. Those basic three principles that we must train all managers and food workers about are:
It’s not all common sense to everyone. Food workers must observe the highest possible standards of personal hygiene to make certain that food does not become contaminated by pathogenic microorganisms, physical or chemical hazards. High standards of personal hygiene also play an important part in creating a good public image, as well as protecting food. Hand washing, fingernails, food worker illness policy (including exclusion of ill workers, cuts, burns, bandages, etc.), hair, uniforms, glove use, jewellery, personal cleanliness, or unsanitary habits such as eating, drinking, smoking, or spitting are all parts of defining personal hygiene standards. Poor hand washing is one of the leading causes of foodborne illness. “Active Hand Hygiene” is a concept that really helps. There is a benefit to writing down standard operating procedures for the correct hand washing method / safe hands procedure to follow when each crewmember is trained about this crucial expectation in your facility.
We can reduce bacterial growth in potentially hazardous foods by limiting the time food is in the danger zone (140° F to 41° F) during any steps of the food flow from receiving through service. The FDA Food Code recommendation no more than a cumulative 4 hours in the danger zone. Use a calibrated thermometer to chart time and temperature based upon your menu for: cold holding (41° F), hot holding (140° F), cooking (based on the food), reheating (165° F), and cooling. Rapid cooling of hot foods (leftovers) or foods cooked several hours advance of service is a special challenge, which allows a six-hour two stage cooling method.
This is simply the transfer of harmful microorganisms or substances to food and covers a multitude of potential food handling errors in all stages of food flow. Cross contamination can occur at any time.
The three routes:
1) food to food,
2) hands to food, or
3) equipment to food. Ready-to-eat foods must receive the most care to prevent contamination.
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