| Washing
your hands before and during food preparation is one of
the best ways to prevent the spread of food poisoning bacteria.
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A
survey by the Food and Drink Federation, published during
National Food Safety Week 2001, found that:
-
26%
of men and 17% of women said they do not always wash
their hands before preparing food
-
31%
of men and 17% of women said they do not regularly wash
their hands after using the toilet
If you don't wash your hands before food preparation,
your hands could be covered in dirt and bacteria from
the toilet, the bin or from many other sources inside
and outside the home. These could then be transferred
onto food and cause food poisoning.
-
It's
also very important to wash your hands after handling
raw foods because you could spread bacteria from them
to other foods (cross-contamination).
-
Make
sure you wash hands thoroughly, using warm water and
a liquid soap. Work up a good lather and make sure you
wash your wrists, hands, fingers, thumbs, fingernails,
and in between the fingers. Rinse the soap off your
hands with clean water.
-
It's
also important to dry your hands thoroughly because
bacteria spread more easily if your hands are damp.
Dry your hands on a clean hand towel, not on a tea towel
or your apron.
And remember:
don't handle food when you are ill with stomach problems,
such as diarrhoea or vomiting
-
don't
touch food if you have sores or cuts, unless they are
covered with a waterproof dres
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