Is a Written Health Policy Right for your Foodservice Operation?

Last month, we introduced you to the foodborne pathogens every foodservice employee should know by name: Norovirus, Hepatitis A, Salmonella Typhi, Shigella, E. coli, and Salmonella. We talked about how they spread, what makes each one dangerous, and why understanding the basics of those is important for those who work in, or manage, foodservice operations. If you haven’t read that post yet, it’s worth going back to check it out.

In this blog, we’re taking the next logical step: what does your operation actually do with that knowledge? Because knowing which pathogens to be concerned with is only half the equation. The other half is having a documented, enforceable system that keeps infected employees from bringing those pathogens into your kitchen in the first place. That system has a name in the FDA Food Code, and it is referred to in §2-201. It’s called the Written Employee Health Policy.

There’s a scene that plays out in kitchens across America every single day. A line cook comes in looking a little pale. Maybe they have a stomach bug. Maybe they threw up the night before. They know they’re sick, but they come in anyway. Afterall, they need the paycheck, they don’t want to let the team down, and because nobody ever told them clearly that working sick can be a food code violation. A written Employee Health Policy is the document that closes that gap, and if you don’t have one, today is the day to fix that.

First things, first though. Is a written health policy required in the code. Here is where it is again important to check your local jurisdiction’s requirements, but as far as the 2022 Model Food Code, no, it is not required! What is required is that the permit holder ensure employees report covered symptoms and diagnoses to the person in charge, and that the person in charge act on those reports through exclusion or restriction. The code mandates the system, that is the reporting, the restriction, the exclusion, but it does not use the word “written” in describing the policy itself. However, a verbal policy is unenforceable, inconsistently applied, and leaves you with no evidence of compliance when something goes wrong. The written policy protects you as much as it protects your customers.

The FDA Food Code’s employee health provisions exist because sick food workers are one of the leading causes of foodborne illness outbreaks in the United States. The pathogens we discussed in our previous blog were chosen specifically because they can be shed in feces, saliva, or vomit, and can be transmitted directly to food through contaminated hands, surfaces, or respiratory droplets. These aren’t theoretical risks; they are the documented causes of some of the most devastating foodservice-associated outbreaks on record.

 


…these pathogens share a critical characteristic: infected individuals can transmit the organism to food before they feel sick, while they’re symptomatic, and in some cases even after symptoms are resolved


That’s exactly why a proactive, written health policy, not reactive, not informal policy, is the only approach that works. In conversations with operators over many years, a few common reasons come up for why the written health policy gets neglected:

  • We communicate it verbally at orientation.”
    • Verbal communication is not documented communication. If an employee claims they didn’t know the reporting requirements and causes an outbreak, “we told them verbally” is not a defensible position.
  • We handle it case by case.
    • Case-by-case management invites inconsistency, favoritism, and failure. A written policy ensures the same standards apply to the part-time server as to the long-term cook.
  • “We don’t want to penalize employees for being sick.”
    • This is a legitimate concern, but the solution isn’t to skip the policy. A better solution would be to pair the policy with an adequate sick leave structure. Employees don’t come into work ill because they don’t care about food safety; they come to work while they are ill because they can’t afford to stay home.
  • “It’s too complicated.”
    • The core requirements can fit on two pages. Simplicity is achievable.

The legal exposure here is significant. If an employee causes a foodborne illness outbreak and your establishment cannot produce a written health policy, one that the employee signed acknowledging they understood their reporting obligations, you are in a vulnerable position during any regulatory investigation or civil litigation.

So, the real answer…the only answer…to if a written health policy is right for your operation is an unequivocal yes! Not a light yes, or a “sometimes” yes, a strong, resounding YES! Section 2-201 of the FDA Food Code exists because sick food workers cause outbreaks, outbreaks cause illness and death, and the food industry has a legal and moral obligation to prevent them. The written employee health policy is one of the most powerful tools you have to fulfill that obligation. Check back in with our next blog and we will discuss some strategies to craft a policy that works for you and your foodservice operation. Risk Nothing.

READ MORE POSTS

  • food safety in the new year

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.

  • taking-out-trash

To Toss or Not to Toss? That is the question.

Our first blog for the month emphasized the basic safe food practices needed to keep you and your guests healthy (and happy!), especially during these times of COVID. The impact of foodborne illness can range from an uncomfortable few days to hospitalization or death. Foodborne illness IS preventable and the steps taken to keep food safe also maintain quality of food, and ultimately profitability. Think of attention to food safety as part of quality control and a win-win business strategy. Knowledge about food safety can be helpful when controlling costs as making wise decisions when determining the fate of unserved food can affect the bottom line.

  • hamburger_prep

Holiday Food Safety Controls

In case you have not noticed - the holidays are here! We have seen store decorations up since mid-September and early bird deals advertised for several weeks, stretching the typical Black Friday deals throughout the month as retailers strive to ensure market share, while following increasingly stringent mandates for physical distancing

  • cooling-practices

Proper Cooling: Your Food-Safe Culture Demands It

Last week, we had a great webinar presented by Dr. Paola Paez from the Center for Food Safety in Child Nutrition Programs at Kansas State University.  If you were not able to join us, please feel free to go back and review the webinar to learn some valuable ways in which you can implement safe cooling practices in your foodservice operation.