Brushing up on Hygiene: Are Nail Brushes the Unsung Hero of Clean Hands?
Last month, I focused the discussion within the blogs on handwashing. One aspect of handwashing that I did not cover was the use of nail brushes, and this is a question I am often asked while doing food safety training programs. The nail brush is an often-overlooked tool that can play a crucial role in ensuring hand hygiene. But it must be used correctly to be effective, otherwise it can have the opposite effect.
If you’ve followed our blogs at all or if you have ever worked in a foodservice operation, you know the importance of an effective hand hygiene program. Our hands are the primary tools in food preparation and handling. They encounter various surfaces and substances throughout the day, potentially harboring bacteria and pathogens. In a foodservice environment, nail care is essential to preventing foodborne illness. The areas under the fingernails are particularly prone to trapping dirt and microorganisms.
Nail brushes are simple devices and can be purchased on Amazon for as little as $5.00. They are designed to clean the areas under the fingernails and around the cuticles, where regular handwashing is generally not as effective. These brushes have stiff bristles that can dislodge trapped dirt and bacteria, ensuring a more thorough cleaning process. By incorporating the use of nail brushes into the handwashing routine, foodservice workers can significantly reduce the risk of contamination.
While a nail brush seems like an obvious tool to include in our handwashing arsenal, some states have been removing them from their food code, and the 2022 FDA Model Food Code has no requirement that a handwashing station include a nail brush (outside of the inclusion of a nail brush as one of the two effective control measures if an operation allows barehand contact with ready-to-eat foods). Why would this be? Even the annex three of the food code espouses the benefits of a nail brush, stating “the area under the fingernails, known as the “subungual space”, has by far the largest concentration of microbes on the hand and this is also the most difficult area of the hand to decontaminate. Fingernail brushes…have been found to be effective tools in decontaminating this area of the hand. Proper use of single-use fingernail brushes, or designated individual fingernail brushes for each employee, during the handwashing procedure can achieve up to a 5-log reduction in microorganisms on the hands.”
Nail brushes may seem like a small detail in the grand scheme of your food safety program, but their impact on hygiene and food safety can be substantial – either negatively or positively.
The reason they are not required in the food code and that many states are now removing the requirement is that nail brushes themselves must be kept clean to be effective. Think about the environment at the handwashing station, damp, sometimes wet, and a nailbrush can be dirty – which can cause bacteria to survive, and perhaps grow and thrive. If you read the portion above from annex three of the food code, it does note that a SINGLE-USE or DESIGNATED INDIVIDUAL fingernail brush can achieve a 5-log reduction. This is because of the difficulty operators have with keeping a reusable fingernail brush clean and sanitary. I believe it was EcoLab used to sell nail brushes with a sanitizer dish, but I cannot even find that on their website any longer, so I am assuming contamination became an issue and they stopped carrying them (or no one ordered them, so they discontinued them). They do still carry a nail brush, but without the sanitizing dish.
So, should you have a nail brush in your foodservice? I would encourage you to talk to your inspector first. While I have not heard this directly from inspectors, I have been told by many foodservice operators across the country that their local health department or inspector asked them not to have a nail brush on-site. If you are allowed to have a nail brush, I would encourage you to purchase single-use brushes (which are not cheap, but even Temu has a pack of 100 nail brushes for $0.079 each) or provide one for each employee and ask them to maintain it properly. If you and your inspector determine that a shared nail brush is acceptable for your organization (which I would tend to advise against more and more with the research I have read on these), be sure that you have a method to clean and sanitize it effectively after each use and store it properly.
Nail brushes may seem like a small detail in the grand scheme of your food safety program, but their impact on hygiene and food safety can be substantial – either negatively or positively. Give it some consideration before implementing the use of nail brushes in your operation and make sure it is a positive addition to your plan and not a negative one. Risk Nothing.
Developing Good Food Safety Habits
Good habits and habit development are something that has fascinated me for several years. If you’ve attended any the training programs or presentations that my colleagues and I have conducted through our Center for Food Safety in Child Nutrition Programs, you’ve likely heard me opine about the importance of habits and how habits are created. Many times, in foodservice operations we wonder why our staff don’t follow the food safety practices we have established in our operation. Perhaps they don’t wash their hands when they are required, perhaps they just don’t use the proper method of handwashing, or perhaps we find that they don’t complete our HACCP logs as often as our program dictates should occur. And while we can stomp our feet and say “it is their job, they should just do it”, it really isn’t that simple. We can’t order people to change, although if we could, business and human resources would be so much simpler.
Getting Your Playbook for Food Safety Organized
As anyone who has ever worked in a foodservice operation knows, from the time food is received in your establishment to the time it is served to your customers, following proper food safety practices is crucial. What many don’t often think about is this time really should extend from the time the manager places their orders with their suppliers (including which purveyors you utilize), through the time the food is consumed – even if that consumption occurs off your premises and days after the original order was picked up by the guest. This is something that has certainly been highlighted by the pandemic as customers across the nation are utilizing take-out, curbside to go, and third-party delivery options more so now than ever before.
Getting Started with Building the Infrastructure
Hopefully in our first January blog, we convinced you of the importance of establishing an infrastructure within your operation to support a safe food culture. So, how does one go about doing this? Well, like any major project, break it into small bites. In our opinion, having a written guide for employees that documents expectations related to food safety basics of employee health and hygiene, temperature controls, and cleaning and sanitizing is the first step. Having this documentation serves as a reference for training and helps fulfill the mission of most foodservice operators which is to serve safe, quality food.
Food Safety Resolutions for the New Year
Finally, 2020 is in our rearview mirror and we can all turn the page to 2021! Resolutions for the new year might be more of the same from prior years (lose weight, exercise more, less screen time, etc.) OR you may have identified new practices to implement in your operation. If the latter, likely goals included some practices related to food safety – especially given the turmoil of 2020 and heightened concern by customers. It is our philosophy that attention to safe food handling practices is a win-win for any operation because of the direct relationship between food safety and food quality, which in turn leads to customer satisfaction. This past year has also demonstrated that attention to safety can affect the bottom line. Thus, the topic of our first SafeBites webinar for 2021 is on the topic of the return on investment of food safety, it is scheduled for January 20, so register now and please plan to attend.