Food Borne Illnesses
Food Defense & Security
Food Safety & Labels
Biological Hazards
Chemical/Physical Hazards
100

Caused by Clostridium perfringens, with an onset time of 8-16 hours, often from meat, poultry, or gravy.

Perfringens food poisoning

100

Protecting food products from intentional contamination by biological, chemical, physical, or radiological agents. 

Food defense.

100

A system to ensure that illness or harm will not result from eating food.

Food safety.

100

These bacteria change taste, odor, or texture but usually don't cause illness.

Spoilage bacteria.

100

Milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, soy, fish, shellfish, and wheat fall into this group.

Major food allergens.

200

Caused by Bacillus cereus, with an onset time of 10-16 hours, often from meat, stews, or gravies.

B. cereus food poisoning.

200

Security practices like fencing, alarms, and cameras around a facility's perimeter.

Outside security.

200

Reliable access to sufficient, nutritious food or population.

Food security. 
200

These microorganisms cause foodborne and include E. coli, Salmonella, and Listeria.

Pathogenic bacteria.

200

These hazards come from building materials, pallets, or post-process insect entry.

Sources of physical hazards.

300

The illness caused by Campylobacter jejuni, that lasts about 2-10 days and is often from unpasteurized milk, ad contaminated water.

Campylobacteriosis.

300

Monitoring workers, issuing ID cards, and employee training.

Personnel security.

300

The four items required on food packaging: product name, manufacturer's name/address, amount in package, and ingredients.

Food label.

300

Microorganisms that are so small they require a microscope to see, and can cause illness or death.

Biological hazards.

300

Pesticides, antibiotics, fertilizers, and sanitizers are examples of these.

Added chemical hazards.

400

The illness from Cryptosporidium, from uncooked food or contaminated drinking water, causes slight fever, and cramps.

Intestinal Cryptosporidiosis.

400

Protecting against intentional contamination or sabotage inside a facility.

Inside security.

400
Everyone along the farm-to-table continuum - from product to retail - shares responsibility for this.

Food safety.

400

The illness caused by Clostridium botulinum from improperly canned foods or baked potatoes in foil.

Botulism.

400

Light fixtures, gauge covers, bottles, and jars can cause this hazard if broken.

Glass contamination (physical hazard).

500

The two types of bacteria that spoil or contaminate food: one changes odor/taste/texture, and the other causes illness.

SPoilage bacteria and pathogenic bacteria.

500

The process a company uses to handle an intentional contamination or threat.

Incident response.

500

Prevents illness but usually results in few deaths, while it counterpart may result in many deaths.

Food safety and food defense.

500
The illness caused by Escherichia coli found in lettuce, berries, or basil that results in diarrhea and cramps.

E. coli illness.

500

A chemical not allowed in food, such as pesticide residue or cleaning solution, that can cause illness or death.

 Chemical hazard.

M
e
n
u