Safety questions:
Are kitchen workers taught sanitary precautions, supplied with hot water and
foaming soap for handwashing, and ample supplies of disposable gloves?
Does the kitchen manager/s have training in food handling protocol? Does he or she know to tell workers to wear hair nets, no bracelets, watches no rings, no danging earrings, and to wear aprons?
Are persons doing seva work given protective equipment, such as googles,
gloves, told to wear closed to shoes, taught proper lifting technique?
Are there precautions against dehydration, such as reminders to drink water through the day and sufficient supplies of clean water? This means purchasing ample supplies of bottled water if plumbing is inadequate.
Additional safety precautions
People come to Monte Sahaja from all over the world. Diseases travel as fast as we do.
Does the management at Monte Sahaja take care to require proof that residents have proof that they:
Test negative for TB or have a note from a licensed physician that if
diagnosed with TB, the condition has been treated?
This is no joke. Multi drug resistant TB is a problem in the Russian Federation - TB is prevalent in India.
TB Russian Federation
[www.google.com]
TB India
[www.google.com]
they
are up to date on their immunizations?
* Hepatitis A
* Measles (outbreaks of measles are occurring all over the world - Israel,
Philippines, USA)
[www.google.com]
* Whooping cough (adults can get it if immunizations not up to date. Years ago,
at my neighborhood Buddhist sangha, which was residential, many adults got WC.
Makes you ill for a long time.
* Tetanus
* Diptheria
* Chickenpox (Nasty for small kids, even worse for adults and potentially
dangerous for elders)
Are kitchen workers taught sanitary precautions, supplied with hot water and
foaming soap for handwashing, and ample supplies of disposable gloves?
Does the kitchen manager/s have training in food handling protocol? Does he or she know to tell workers to wear hair nets, no bracelets, watches no rings, no danging earrings, and to wear aprons?
Are persons doing seva work given protective equipment, such as googles,
gloves, told to wear closed to shoes, taught proper lifting technique?
Are there precautions against dehydration, such as reminders to drink water through the day and sufficient supplies of clean water? This means purchasing ample supplies of bottled water if plumbing is inadequate.
Additional safety precautions
People come to Monte Sahaja from all over the world. Diseases travel as fast as we do.
Does the management at Monte Sahaja take care to require proof that residents have proof that they:
Test negative for TB or have a note from a licensed physician that if
diagnosed with TB, the condition has been treated?
This is no joke. Multi drug resistant TB is a problem in the Russian Federation - TB is prevalent in India.
TB Russian Federation
[www.google.com]
TB India
[www.google.com]
they
are up to date on their immunizations?
* Hepatitis A
* Measles (outbreaks of measles are occurring all over the world - Israel,
Philippines, USA)
[www.google.com]
* Whooping cough (adults can get it if immunizations not up to date. Years ago,
at my neighborhood Buddhist sangha, which was residential, many adults got WC.
Makes you ill for a long time.
* Tetanus
* Diptheria
* Chickenpox (Nasty for small kids, even worse for adults and potentially
dangerous for elders)