Agencies
Foodborne Illness
The Cost of Foodborne Illness
Contaminants
Keeping Food Safe
100

Agency that inspects meat poultry and eggs and foods that cross state boundaries

What is the USDA?

100

A foodborne illness is 

What is a disease transmitted to people by food

100

The most important cost of foodborne illness

What is the human costs

100
One physical contaminant is 

What is 

Foreign objects such as metal shavings, staples and bandages can get into food.  So can glass, dirt and even bag ties.  Naturally occurring objects, such as fish bones in fillets are another example.

100

Cross-contamination is

When pathogens can be transferred from one surface to another

200

Agency that inspects all food, except for meat poultry and eggs

Who is the FDA?

200

Pressure to work quickly can make it hard to take the time to follow food safety practices.

What is time?

200

Restaurants may experience loss of..

What is loss of customers and sales or reputation

200

Foodservice __________ can contaminate food if they are used incorrectly.  

What are chemicals

200

Never purchase food from 

What are unsafe sources

300

THIS SCIENCE-BASED CODE PROVIDES RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FOOD SAFETY REGULATIONS

What is the FDA food-code?

300

Illness-causing microorganisms are more frequently found on types of food that once were considered safe.

What are pathogens

300

This may increase if a foodborne illness occurs at a restaurant

What is Insurance Premiums

300

The three contaminants are 

What are Biological, Physical, and Chemical

300

Food has suffered time-temperature abuse when

What is it has stayed too long at temperatures that are good for the growth of pathogens

400

Name two of the Regulatory authorities responsibilities.

  • Inspecting operations

  • Enforcing regulations

  • Investigating complaints and illnesses

  • Issuing licenses and permits

  • Approving construction

  • Reviewing and approving HACCP plans

400

Foodborne Illnesses Occur by 

What is unsafe food is usually the result of contamination, which is the presence of harmful substances in food.  

400

Victims of foodborne illnesses may experience the following

What is lost work, medical costs, long-term disability or death

400

This contaminant is responsible for most foodborne illness

What is biological

400

The four practices that make food unsafe

What are time temperature abuse, cross-contamination, poor personal hygiene and sanitizing

500

The five Government Agencies that inspect food

What are the FDA, CDC, USDA, PHS and state and local regulatory agencies?

500

An illness is considered an outbreak when 

  • Two or more people have the same symptoms

  • An investigation is conducted by state and local regulatory authorities

  • The outbreak is confirmed by a laboratory analysis

500
Three of the costs of foodborne illness are
  • Loss of customers and sales

  • Loss of reputation

  • Negative media exposure

  • Lowered staff morale

  • Lawsuits & Legal Fees

  • Staff Missing Work

  • Increased Insurance Premiums

  • Staff Retraining

500

Three examples of biiological contaminants are 

What are plants, mushrooms and seafood

500

To cause a foodborne illness

  1. Contaminated ingredients are added to food that receives no further cooking.

  2. Ready-to-eat food touches contaminated surfaces

  3. Contaminated food touches or drips fluids onto cooked or ready-to-eat food.

  4. A food handler touches contaminated food and then touches ready-to-eat food

  5. Contaminated wiping cloths touch food-contact surfaces