Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Enjoy a safe & healthy Vaisakhi!

Shelley Beaudet, 11 Apr, 2019 09:19 PM

    Seva? If you are serving or giving away food, the Vancouver Coastal Health Environmental Health Officers have some tips to follow so that everyone can have a healthy and safe celebration.

    There are many types of serious illnesses or food poisoning people can get from eating food that has not been prepared or stored correctly. People can get sick minutes or weeks after eating contaminated food. Sometimes it can be so serious that people are hospitalized. Children under five years, pregnant women, and seniors can be most seriously affected.

    Food safety tips
    Keep food safe by keeping hot foods such as samosas, sauces, rice and daal over 60 degrees Celsius. Cold foods such as kheer and yogurt or milk should be kept below 4 degrees Celsius. You can measure this with a food thermometer, available at grocery stores and dollar stores.

    It is the safest to prepare food the day you will be eating it. Cooling and reheating food improperly can result in illness. Don’t make your food a day in advance before the event.

    Protect food from germs by covering it with plastic wrap or aluminum foil.

    Don’t put food in cardboard flats/boxes or newspaper.

    Don’t prepare food if you are sick. People who eat the food can become sick.

    Cleaning tips
    Handwashing is the best way to stop the spread of illness. Wash your hands for 30 seconds with soap and water, before handling food.

    Use a clean and sanitized utensil (spoon, fork) to stir food. Don’t use your hands.

    Don’t handle food with your bare hands. Use a utensil or wear gloves.

    Clean and sanitize surfaces where you prepare and store your food.

    Make a temporary handwashing station with a vessel filled with warm water with a spigot/faucet, liquid soap, paper towels and a vessel for the waste water.

    For more information visit www.vch.ca/Vaisakhi.

    Shelley Beaudet is a Senior Environmental Health Officer at Vancouver Coastal Health

    MORE National ARTICLES

    15 Canadians On Cruise Ship That Was Stranded Off Norway; One Injured

    Global Affairs Canada says the Canadians were on board the Viking Sky cruise ship when it ran into engine trouble off Norway's rough, frigid western coast.

    15 Canadians On Cruise Ship That Was Stranded Off Norway; One Injured

    Justin Trudeau Delivers Campaign-Style Speech While Introducing Candidate Tamara Taggart

    The prime minister fired off a flurry of verbal jabs at Conservative Party leader Andrew Scheer, and also former prime minister Stephen Harper, giving a glimpse of what could be a heated campaign for the October election.

    Justin Trudeau Delivers Campaign-Style Speech While Introducing Candidate Tamara Taggart

    Sentencing Judge In Broncos Crash Calls For Carnage On Highways To End

    A judge called for an end to "carnage on our highways" as she sent a truck driver to prison on Friday for causing a fatal crash involving a Saskatchewan junior hockey team's bus.    

    Sentencing Judge In Broncos Crash Calls For Carnage On Highways To End

    Quebec Man Convicted In Mafia-Linked Drug Bust To Be Deported To Italy

    Michele Torre, a Quebec man convicted in 1996 for his role in a Mafia-linked conspiracy, appears to have run out of options to stay in Canada and is scheduled to be deported to his native Italy Friday night, his lawyer said.

    Quebec Man Convicted In Mafia-Linked Drug Bust To Be Deported To Italy

    Factors Judge Considered In Sentencing Of Truck Driver Jaskirat Singh Sidhu In Humboldt Broncos Crash

    The truck driver who caused the deadly Humboldt Broncos bus crash was sentenced Friday to eight years in prison for 29 counts of dangerous driving causing death or bodily harm. 

    Factors Judge Considered In Sentencing Of Truck Driver Jaskirat Singh Sidhu In Humboldt Broncos Crash

    B.C. Researcher Says Device Mimics Parent's Touch To Help Babies Cope With Pain

    B.C. Researcher Says Device Mimics Parent's Touch To Help Babies Cope With Pain
    Lead inventor and occupational therapist Liisa Holsti said the Calmer device is a rectangular platform that replaces a mattress inside an incubator and is programmed with information on a parent's heartbeat and breathing motion.

    B.C. Researcher Says Device Mimics Parent's Touch To Help Babies Cope With Pain