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Preventive measures: Food Borne Disease

Food safety is extremely important to prevent food-borne illness.

Food-borne illnesses can cause a variety of symptoms. For small children, older adults, and people with weakened immune systems, symptoms can be severe and even life-threatening.

The cause of most food-borne illness is bacteria. Some of these bacteria are E. coli, salmonella, Staphylococcus aureus, and Clostridium botulinum.

You can prevent most food-borne illnesses when you know and use proper ways to handle, store, and prepare food.

https://youtu.be/lf_-DqzTcic

Buy and Store Food Safely

Prepare Food Safely

Store Leftover Food Safely

Food Storage Times

Safe storage times for refrigerator and freezer are suggested in the list of foods below:

Food StoredRefrigerator TimeFreezer Time
Meat (raw)3 to 5 days6 to 12 months
Meat (cooked)3 to 4 days2 to 3 months
Ground meats (raw)1 to 2 days3 to 4 months
Ground meats (cooked)3 to 4 days2 to 3 months
Poultry (raw)1 to 2 days9 months (parts) 1 year (whole)
Poultry (cooked)3 to 4 days4 to 6 months
Lunch meats (open package)3 to 5 days1 to 2 months (freezer wrap)
Fish (raw)1 to 2 daysUp to 6 months
Fish (cooked)3 to 4 days4 to 6 months
Eggs in shell (raw)4 to 5 weeksDo not freeze
Eggs in shell (hard cooked)1 weekDo not freeze
MilkA few days past “sell by” dateDo not freeze
Cheese (hard, semi-hard) 3 to 4 weeksCan freeze (changes taste and texture)

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