China's Ministry of Education has ordered local education
departments to inspect sanitary conditions and the cleanliness of
food and drinking water in all schools in their jurisdictions.
The ministry on Thursday issued a circular concerning
responsibility for food security in schools, in response to two
recent food poisoning incidents among students.
Local education departments and school leaders are responsible
for students' health and should always keep in mind the "health
first" guideline, said the circular.
Schoolmasters should be the first to answer for food poisoning
and those involved in the incidents should be held accountable, it
said.
Local education departments and schools should give special
attention to food security and bowel disease control work at the
beginning of the new semester.
The two recent food poisoning cases happened on Sept. 1, the
first day back to school after the summer vacation. There is no
regular cleaning and disinfection of school kitchens and dining
halls during the month-long vacation.
The notice ordered a prompt check of food and drinking water in
schools. Schools with problems will have to lift their sanitation
standards to the required level by a certain date.
Those failing to do so will be publicly criticized and
punished.
It called for a nationwide educational campaign on knowledge
about food poisoning and bowel disease prevention among teachers
and students.
Students in rural schools should be dissuaded from drinking
unboiled water, eating wild fruits and herbs and buying food and
snacks from street peddlers without licenses, it said.
It also stressed that schools should report health emergencies
immediately to local disease control centers and educational
departments according to related regulations.
About 300 pupils at Chongzhou City Experimental Primary School,
in southwest China's Sichuan Province, came down with food
poisoning after eating lunch at school last Friday.
The latest test results confirmed that there was bacteria in the
food which could cause diarrhea.
Some students from a middle school in Shenyang City, northeast
China's Liaoning Province, also showed symptoms of
food poisoning after eating dinner in the school cafeteria the same
day.
Investigators found that the cafeteria had no sanitary
certificate from the local health authorities. None of its cooks
and service people had received any health checkups.
(Xinhua News Agency September 8, 2006)