You know... sometimes I hate my life.
So we were reviewing an internal audit on TS22002 13.6 which states:
Where permitted by law, employees shall be required to report the following conditions to management for
possible exclusion from food-handling areas: jaundice, diarrhoea, vomiting, fever, sore throat with fever,
visibly infected skin lesions (boils, cuts or sores) and discharges from the ear, eye or nose.
So being a professional (and an idiot) I decide to determine if it is within legality to require employees to report if they have such conditions.
I have found within 21CFR110.10 a provision that states:
The plant management shall take all reasonable measures and precautions to ensure the following:
(a)Disease control. Any person who, by medical examination or supervisory observation, is shown to have, or appears to have, an illness, open lesion, including boils, sores, or infected wounds, or any other abnormal source of microbial contamination by which there is a reasonable possibility of food, food-contact surfaces, or food-packaging materials becoming contaminated, shall be excluded from any operations which may be expected to result in such contamination until the condition is corrected. Personnel shall be instructed to report such health conditions to their supervisors.
So.. so far I have found the federal legal statute. Now I have to find the appropriate state statute... if one exists.
So this isn't so much a question as a vent... But if anyone happens to know if New York State has anything like this... feel free to drop it on me.
Thanks