Partnership for Food Safety Education

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Fighting BAC with Clean, Reusable Bags

September 22, 2016

Lynn NakanakamuraTenganmura-Tengan is an Extension Educator at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. Lynn and her team at the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources developed and disseminated information on Germ-free Reusable Bags (GRUB) through the Nutrition Education for Wellness website, Hawaii county website, National Extension Association of Family and Consumer Sciences national meeting, workshops, and various community events. Download the flyer here: www.ctahr.hawaii.edu/new/resources/grub_flyer.pdf

Lynn shares the story of “Jan” and how she changed her reusable bags practices after learning about GRUB.

Reusable Bags are Handy for This Volunteer

Jan is an active 72-year-old retired teacher and a volunteer with church and senior groups. She frequently uses her reusable grocery bags to make purchases for her church and for older adults needing assistance with food shopping.

Hot Van + Dirty Bags = Potential Food Safety Risk

Jan kept a handy collection of reusable bags in the back of her van.  Her concerns were about the bags tearing and getting worn. She never thought about the food safety risks of cross-contamination when she reused her bags.

Jan saw the GRUB (Germ-free Re-Usable Bags) handout at a supermarket exhibit featuring healthy lifestyles. The display included information about keeping grocery bags clean to prevent cross- contamination. The handout information resonated with Jan and her desire to keep the older adults she serves healthy and safe.

Clean Bags- Help Keep Food Safe

Jan now washes her reusable grocery bags after each usGRUB Handoute, ready for the next time she’s out shopping.

Lynn says, “We help people understand simple steps to keep their food safe and be confident they are doing their best for their family and friends”.

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Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, Fight BAC, food safety, Food safety education, Food safety educator, Food safety teacher, Hawaii, older adults, older people, seniors

U of Missouri Extension Fights BAC with Backpacks

April 26, 2015

Friday Backpack program reaches 19,400 students weekly

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Missouri children are getting the nutrition and food safety information they need thanks to the BAC Fighters at University of Missouri Extension. Creative programs help make sure kids are eating well, living healthy lifestyles, and forming food safety habits with the help of Fight BAC!® materials. 

Through their Friday Backpack program, more than 19,000 children statewide receive ready to eat foods from their local food bank every Friday. The University of Missouri Extension supplements the program by providing educational materials like kid-friendly recipe cards, activity sheets, and Fight BAC stickers.

In the Show ME Nutrition Curriculum, 150 Nutrition Educators teach kids from Kindergarten through Junior High the facts on healthy eating and food safety. The educators reach kids in many settings including schools, food stores, and libraries. They extend the learning to parents and caregivers by giving kids newsletters and handouts to take home and share. Healthy eating and food safety go hand in hand for whole health!
Thank you to the BAC Fighters at University of Missouri Extension!

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, children, Fight BAC, food safety, Food safety educator, Food safety resources, Food safety teacher, Missouri

Mixing it up with Fight BAC!®

February 26, 2015

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With over 20 years in public schools teaching food safety, Melissa Blaine still finds ways to get creative with Fight BAC!®. Melissa is a Family and Consumer Sciences teacher at Grant Middle School in New Mexico. Melissa has been using Fight BAC!® for years in her classrooms and she says her 6th graders love it! But she stays creative and mixes things up by adapting the Fight BAC!® handouts to challenge her kids in new ways on the four core messages: Clean, Separate, Cook, and Chill. Melissa says that the “6th graders are enthusiastic learners and want to be in the kitchen and cook, not just to eat, but to become more independent. They can use these skills in class, at home and in the future in food service jobs”.

Thank you Melissa for the 20 years you have spent Fighting BAC!®

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, children, Core Four Practices, Fight BAC, food safety, Food safety education, Food safety educator, Food safety resources, Food safety teacher, Home food safety, New Mexico

Student Health Educators

February 26, 2015

Connecticut BAC Fighters inform entire school

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Julia Cronin planned a middle school class project that ensured food safety information was spread beyond the walls of her classroom to the entire K- 8 student body of Integrated Day Charter School in Norwich, Connecticut.

Julia, a science teacher, partnered with an english/language arts teacher to have students create Food Safety/Food Choice information brochures. The students used information they learned in class and from online research to create the brochures. One of their favorite sources was the www.fightbac.org website! Once the brochures were created, the students were instructed to share information with their classmates. In this way, the 8th grade students were able to reach their peers and younger classmates.

Julia reflected on the project, “The best part of it all was watching them in the lunchroom teaching the younger students about why they needed to wash their hands and why they should include an ice-pack in their lunchbox.”

She found that once students learned what could happen when food is mishandled, they had ownership of the material and were more motivated to make changes.

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: BAC Fighter, children, Connecticut, Fight BAC, Food safety educator, Food safety teacher, Handwashing

World Health Day Letter from the Executive Director

January 26, 2015

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Shelley Feist, Executive Director of the Partnership for Food Safety Education, discusses World Health Day 2015.

The World Health Day has set aside April 7 to focus on food safety from farm to plate— the theme of World Health Day 2015.  WHO says the day focuses on “demonstrating the importance of food safety along the whole length of the food chain in a globalized world, from production and transport, to preparation and consumption.”

For its’ part, the non-profit Partnership for Food Safety Education will be working through social media on April 7 to recognize and pay tribute to the thousands of health and food safety educators, teachers, and community leaders, that work to teach consumers about the importance of safe food handling to reducing risk of illness – especially for young children and other vulnerable populations.

WHO’s 10 Facts on Food Safety include that “everybody has a role to play in keeping food safe”, (Fact 9) and “consumers should be well informed on food safety practices,” (Fact 10).  These are two important facts that sometimes get pushed down in priority when the food industry is focusing on production, transport, and sales of food.  But these two facts are the basis for the work of the Partnership and its network of BAC Fighters in the United States.

And we agree with WHO’s statement that “People should make informed and wise food choices and adopt adequate behaviors. They should know common food hazards and how to handle food safely, using the information provided in food labelling.”  But as any consumer knows, labels on food might give you some of the steps to keeping food safe (it might give you the safe end-point temperature, for example), but protecting one’s health includes preparing for handling food by first washing hands thoroughly with soap and running water whenever possible;  using a food thermometer to measure if food has reached a safe temperature –not guessing based on whether it looks hot; and being aware of how actions at home might spread harmful bacteria from a raw food to a surface or to hands, and other methods of cross-contamination.

In the United States consumers benefit from a required meat and poultry safe handling label.  Consumers should always take notice of the label, and encourage children to read the label with them when they prepare these products.  For the full range of simple but critical steps to reducing risk of foodborne illness, consumers should turn to Clean, Separate, Cook and Chill, and to fightbac.org as a source to be informed about and involved as active partners in the food safety chain of prevention.

 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: Core Four Practices, Food handling, food safety, Food safety education, Food safety educator, Food safety teacher, foodborne illness, Poultry, prevent foodborne illness, World Health Day

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