Ch. 1 Flashcards
1
Q
Define foodborne illness outbreak
A
- 2 or more ppl get sick from the same food
2
Q
What are the 3 forms of contamination and their definitions? (BCP)
A
- biological contaminants: tiny living creatures in the food
- chemical contaminants: ex. cleaners, sanitizers, polishes
- physical hazards: bits of bone, plastic, other foreign objects not supposed to be in food
3
Q
What are the 5 most common risk factors responsible for foodborne illness outbreaks?
A
- 1.) food is purchased from an unsafe source
- 2.) food is not cooked correctly
- 3.) food is held at incorrect temperatures
- 4.) using contaminated equipment
- 5.) practicing poor personal hygiene
4
Q
What are the 4 ways that food in a facility can become unsafe?
A
- 1.) time-temperature abuse: food left out too long at the wrong temperature
- 2.) cross-contamination: germs transferred from one place to another
- 3.) poor personal hygiene
- 4.) poor cleaning and sanitizing: not knowing how and when to clean things
5
Q
What are the 2 classifications of food groups and their definitions?
A
- TCS: have certain characteristics that allow germs/pathogens to grow on them and have been known historically to cause outbreaks (ex. RAW egg, fish, shellfish, poultry, meat, soy, milk, heat treated plants, baked potatoes
- RTE (ready to eat): have been cooked, washed or prepared
6
Q
Who are included in the high risk population?
A
- people with weakened immune system like elderly or children
7
Q
What are the government agencies that regulate food safety in the US?
A
- FDA writes the model food code - the minimum standards recommended
- USDA inspects meat, poultry, eggs
- the state adapts the model food code and makes laws surrounding it
- local agencies/health department make sure facilities uphold the state laws