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Keeping Baby Safe
If you're a parent, sibling, or babysitter, it's important to practice food
safety. Infants and young children are especially vulnerable to food borne
illness because their immune systems are not fully developed. Also, their
stomachs produce less acid, which makes it easier for harmful microorganisms to
get through their digestive system and invade their bodies.
Here are some important food safety TIPS
when taking care of young children:
Wash Up
- Wash your hands with hot, soapy water after changing a diaper or after any
activity in which your hands could have picked up germs. You don't want to
transmit those germs to an infant or a child. Frequently wash children's hands
with warm (not hot) soapy water.
- Wash eating areas with hot, soapy water.
- Use detergent and hot water to wash and rinse all utensils (including the
can opener) that come in contact with a baby's foods.
- Clean bottles after every use. Harmful bacteria can infect an infant
during the next feeding if the bottle is not washed properly.
- You can reuse the nipples of disposable bottles, but be aware that
bacteria from the formula could be lurking and growing in the nipples.
Thoroughly clean the nipples after each use.
Feeling Under the Weather?
- If you're sick, pass up babysitting for a young child until you're feeling
better, so you don't expose the child to illness. In addition, don't be
involved in any food preparation that may expose the child to harmful
bacteria.
Baby's Food
- Fill a bottle with just enough milk for one serving. Harmful bacteria from
a baby's mouth can be introduced into food or bottles where it can grow and
multiply even after refrigerating and reheating. So, if the baby doesn't
finish the bottle, throw away any leftovers.
- Milk, formula, or food left out at room temperature or without a cold pack
for more than 2 hours should not be used.
- Follow the manufacturer's recommendations for preparing bottles before
filling them with formula or milk. Observe the "Use By" dates on formula cans.
- Do not feed a baby directly from a jar of baby food and put it back in the
refrigerator again. Saliva on the spoon or in the jar can contaminate the
remaining food. Instead, put just enough food on a dish for one serving using
a clean spoon before feeding the baby.
- If using commercial baby foods, check each new jar to see if the safety
button on the lid is down. If the jar lid doesn't "pop" when opened, do not
use. Discard jars with chipped glass or rusty lids.
- Do not feed a baby honey or syrup -- at least for the first 6 months.
Honey and syrups can contain spores of Clostridium botulinum. The
immune systems of adults and older children can prevent the spores from
growing once ingested. However, in an infant, these spores can grow and cause
infant botulism.
Article from
Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, FDA
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