All Posts Tagged: scores on the doors

Update on Food Hygiene Ratings Scheme

The Food Standards Agency has released updates on how our local authorities are progressing with the launch of the Food Hygiene Ratings Scheme. It looks like good progress so far with 180 local authorities publishing over 140,000 ratings from 0 (urgent improvement required) to 5 (very good standards of food hygiene). Now it just needs rolling out properly to the general public, to encourage them to read the ratings, base at least part of their eating out decision on it, and thus to perpetuate the food safety message.

British Sandwich Association adopts Food Hygiene Rating Scheme

In a positive move forward, the British Sandwich Association, the trade association which runs a food safety certification scheme for sandwich and sandwich mix manufacturers, has adopted a minimum 3 out of 5 score as a mandatory requirement for its retail members. The scheme awards score of 0 to 5 where 5 is excellent and 0 indicates urgent attention to food safety controls and /or site standards. Read about it here

So how do sandwich manufacturers, food factories, restaurants, pubs, hotels and takeaways achieve a 5 score? By having commitment to food safety in these primary areas:

  • A HACCP based Food Safety management system – which is mandatory for this and under EC Food Hygiene Regulations
  • Good site standards with appropriate hygienic work-flow, lay-out, hygienic surfaces and hygienic equipment
  • Good Pest Control to minimise risk to food from flies, rodents and cockroaches
  • Good Housekeeping and Hygiene to ensure that the unit is kept nice and clean and, where needed, sanitised
  • Good Personal Hygiene to ensure that food handlers understand and appreciate the risks they can pose to food and take simple measures to avoid risk, such as hand-washing and clean protective clothing, including head covering (how many takeaways and restaurants do you visit where you see food handlers wearing jewellery and loose long hair – I bet it’s quite a few!)
  • Illness reporting procedures to prevent staff suffering from infectious food-borne conditions contaminating food
  • Good waste control – to prevent build up of waste in the food room
  • Good ventilation – to reduce condensation building up

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

And so on……it’s all of course laid out in the Food Hygiene Regulations

And can easily be monitored and improved through the process of internal checks and external hygiene audits.

On another, but related note, it has been suggested to me in the past that, in exercising these controls, we are living in a falsely sterilised environment and have opened ourselves up to immunological weakness. Well consider two things: Have you ever had full blown Salmonella food poisoning from a food establishment? If so you probably would never want it again and you possibly lost valuable work days as a result – all because someone else didn’t care or take the time enough to think of you and minimise the risk! And just by ensuring good food safety we aren’t living in a sterile world. If you go out, as you probably do, every day, into a number of different situations, and if you eat “natural” food (i.e. non processed), such as fruit and salad, then you are presenting a challenge to your system that is just fine.

 

Vomit polished cutlery in New York!!

The scene: Late evening – a pub / restaurant in New York.

A drunken man vomits into a glass which spills onto the table.

A waiter takes off the table cloth and wipes the table with a large white cloth. No sanitiser!

Another waiter comes along with a dry broom and “sweeps” the vomit that has fallen to the floor.

The first waiter replaces the table cloth and…wait for it….

Polishes the newly laid cutlery with the very same cloth!

This is not fiction. A group of three of us witnessed this very recently.

Most places in New York seem to be graded “A” in food safety by the health authority and proudly display this in their windows.

What we witnessed demonstrated lack of food safety culture, lack of food safety knowledge, lack of food safety training and above all a lack of common sense! Grade A? Hmmmmm…..

Scores On The Doors

I note with interest that the Food Standards Agency has published its 5th progress update on its Scores On the Doors scheme. It outlines progress made towards guidance on the mechanisms for revisits for the purpose of rescoring. A new working group has also been put in place to consider a consistency framework. A proposed data standard for information that will be required from local authorities for use with the national data base for displaying scores has been agreed. For more information go to http://www.food.gov.uk/safereating/hyg/scoresonthedoors/

I wonder what your thoughts are on the scheme in general, and the progress being made,  especially those of you who have been inspected or indeed are inspectors?