Title: Personal Hygiene and Household Cleanliness
1Personal Hygiene and Household Cleanliness
2Personal Hygiene and Household Cleanliness
- What are some good personal hygiene practices
that you use....or should use? - Washing your hands and food, and keeping your
house clean
3Washing Your Hands to Reduce the Spread of Disease
- Washing hands single most effective way to
prevent infectious disease - Hands spread 80 of infectious disease ie) common
cold, flu - When should you wash your hands?
- Before and after preparing meals and eating
- After using the washroom
- After handling pets
- After blowing your nose or coughing and sneezing
- What is considered proper practice for sneezing
now?
4Washing Hands
- Need three things
- Water
- Soap soap does not kill germs
- Rubbing of Hands kills germs with soap and
water because it helps to break down the dirt and
grease that germs cling to
5Washing Hands
- Public Health Agency of Canada
- Antibacterial soaps and household cleaners are
not better at preventing the spread of common
illnesses than regular soaps and cleaners - Antibiotic resistance overuse of antibacterial
soaps and cleaners resulting in antibiotic drugs
and disinfectants no longer able to kill
micro-organisms that cause disease - can use alcohol-based cleaners
- Kill both good and bad bacteria
6Washing Hands
7Washing Hands
- 1. Wet hands Remove all rings or other
jewellery, and wet your hands with warm running
water. - 2. Soap Put a small amount of liquid soap in the
palm of one hand. If using bar soap, set it on a
rack so it does not sit in water. Bar soaps that
stay moist attract germs. - 3. Lather Scrub your hands together. Make sure
to scrub between your fingers, under your
fingernails, and the backs of your hands. Do this
for about 20 seconds (this is about the same time
it takes to sing a short song like Happy
Birthday twice).
8Washing Hands
- 4.Rinse Rinse your hands with warm running water
for at least 10 seconds. Try not to handle the
faucets in public washrooms once your hands are
clean. Use a paper towel to turn off the water. - 5.Dry If you are in a public washroom, dry your
hands with a single-use paper towel or air dryer.
Protect them from touching dirty surfaces as you
leave the washroom. If you are at home using a
hand towel, be sure to change it daily. At home
during cold and flu season, each member of your
family could have their own hand towel.
9Washing Hand
- Good and simple hygiene practices to stop spread
of germs at home, work, school - Disinfect your kitchen sink and counters daily
using bleach, ammonia, alcohol, or vinegar-based
cleaners. (Cleaning with soap removes dirt.
Disinfecting kills germs.) - Regularly disinfect your bathroom, including all
doorknobs and faucets. - Regularly disinfect your desk and computer
keyboard, and avoid eating at your desk.
10Washing Hands
- Keep your hands away from your eyes, nose, and
mouth. - Cough or sneeze into your elbow instead of your
hands. - Do not share pens, cups, glasses, dishes, or
cutlery at school or work. - Do not pick up magazines and newspapers in
doctors waiting rooms, staff kitchens, or on
public transit. - Stay at home if you are sick to avoid spreading
germs to other people.
11Foodborne Illness and Safe Food Handling
- 11-13 million Canadians each year suffer from
foodborne illnesses - Foodborne Illness person gets sick from eating
food that has been contaminated with an unwanted
micro-organism or pathogen Food Poisoning - Symptoms stomach cramps, nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea, fever....as well as death - Example Botulism Poisoning poorly preserved
food result in respiratory failure and death
12Foodborne Illness and Safe Food Handling Practices
- Hard to control because most food is produced and
processed in large amounts by big corporations
and/or is imported - Once in food processing plant, can
cross-contaminate other food - All of these factors lead to a greater chance of
foodborne bacteria being spread to a large number
of people
13Foodborne Illness and Safe Food Handling Practices
- New types of foodborne bacteria are being
identified - Example Listeria Monocyogenes causes
Listeriosis - Contaminated meat products Maple Leaf Foods
recall
14Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- In Canada, federal, provincial, and municipal
levels of government are responsible for public
health and food safety - Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA)
- Set rules for how food is processed and sold
- Tests for safety and warns public if discover
unsafe food products - http//www.inspection.gc.ca/english/toce.shtml
15Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Bacteria can survive food processing
- Food can also become contaminated during
preparation, cooking, storage - Safe food handling practices covers how you
buy, store, handle and prepare food - Bacteria grow between 4-60 degrees Celsius
- Keeping food cold (below 4 degrees C) slows
growth of bacteria - Freezing food (below 18 degrees C) stop from
growing
16Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Freezing bacteria wont kill it, need to cook food
to kill it
Food Temperature (C)
Beef, veal, and lamb (medium-rare) 63
Beef, veal, and lamb (well done) 77
Pork 71
Poultry (e.g., chicken, turkey, duck), pieces 74
Poultry, whole 85
Egg dishes 74
Other foods (e.g., hot dogs, stuffing, leftovers) 74
17Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
18Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Clean
- Always wash your hands, utensils, and cooking
surfaces before handling food, while you prepare
it, and after you are finished. - Disinfect kitchen surfaces and utensils.
- Wash fruits and vegetables with fresh cool
running water before preparing and eating them.
Use a brush to scrub produce with firm or rough
surfaces (e.g., potatoes, carrots).
19Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Separate
- Keep meats and their juices separated from other
food in the refrigerator and during preparation. - Keep separate cutting boards and utensils for raw
meats and vegetables/fruits. - Always keep food covered in the refrigerator.
20Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Chill
- After grocery shopping, refrigerate fruits and
vegetables quickly. - Keep your refrigerator at the proper temperature
( 4 C). - Keep your freezer at the proper temperature (
-18 C). - Refrigerate/freeze leftovers and prepared food
within two hours.
21Foodborne Illness and Safe Handling Practices
- Cook
- Prepare food quickly.
- Cook food to a safe internal temperature and
serve it immediately. - Do not let food sit out at temperatures where
bacteria can grow (between 4 and 60 C).
22Indoor Air Quality
- Indoor air pollutants can be biological and
chemical - Biological mould, bacteria, dust mites
- Chemical volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in
household products gases and particles from
fuel-burning appliances (furnace, gas stoves,
tobacco smoke, building materials, outdoor air)
23Indoor Air Quality
- Health Canada
- 3 main ways that should be used together to
improve indoor air quality - Source control preventing pollutants from
getting into the air - a. Avoid smoking indoors.
- b. Keep your home clean by dusting and vacuuming
regularly. - c. Keep your home dry. Control the degree of
moisture in the air, or the humidity, by using a
humidifier. Fix anything in the house that causes
dampness and allows mould to grow.
24Indoor Air Quality
- d. Make sure all of the fuel-burning appliances
in the house are working properly. - e. Avoid idling cars and lawnmowers in attached
garages. - f. Reduce off-gassing of household materials and
products by using/installing paints, cleaning
products, insulation, carpets, and other
household products containing fewer VOCs.
25Indoor Air Quality
- 2. Increase ventilation moving outdoor air
indoors decreases stale air and reduce indoor
air pollutants - opening windows and doors
- turning on kitchen and bathroom fans
- installing mechanical heating, ventilation, and
air conditioning systems (HVACs) that can bring
in outdoor air, vent stale air, circulate air,
and control temperature and humidity.
26Indoor Air Quality
- 3. Air Cleaning remove impurities from air
some remove particles, not as good at removing
gases - Ion generators portable units that use static
charges to trap particles - Electronic air cleaners use electrical field to
trap particles