Jump to content

  • Quick Navigation
Photo

Validating Gloves Free Practices

Share this

  • You cannot start a new topic
  • Please log in to reply
6 replies to this topic

rmoriarty

    Grade - Active

  • IFSQN Active
  • 3 posts
  • 0 thanks
0
Neutral

  • United States
    United States

Posted 17 July 2025 - 10:09 PM

I recently started at a new company where one of the value added comments from their last SQF audit was to perform a sanitation validation for employees not wearing gloves while handling food. Our current practitioner said that the auditor last year wanted us to validate this by swabbing hands of employees before and after handwashing, but this seems strange to me so I was wondering if anyone has performed similar validations?

 

For reference we are a dried pasta manufacturer and employees will touch the pasta throughout the production process (before and after drying). We do not perform a kill step as the consumer must boil the pasta prior to consumption.

 

TIA


  • 0

Tony-C

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 4,743 posts
  • 1407 thanks
776
Excellent

  • Earth
    Earth
  • Gender:Male
  • Location:World
  • Interests:My main interests are sports particularly football, pool, scuba diving, skiing and ten pin bowling.

Posted Yesterday, 03:31 AM

Hi rmoriarty,

 

:welcome:

 

Welcome to the IFSQN forums.

 

Understand that your products are being boiled by the customer but since your employees are handling the products you don’t want to add unnecessary contamination to the product which may be handled by the customer prior to cooking.

 

In addition, the SQF Code does require personnel to have clean hands:

11.3.2 Handwashing

11.3.2.1 All personnel shall have clean hands … etc.

 

A few hand swabs now and again would not hurt to monitor that handwashing is being carried out and is effective. So, bit of monitoring/verification. Not validation.

 

Kind regards,

 

Tony


Edited by Tony-C, Yesterday, 03:32 AM.

  • 0

IFSQN Implementation Packages, helping sites achieve food safety certification since 2009: 

IFSQN BRC, FSSC 22000, IFS, ISO 22000, SQF (Food, Packaging, Storage & Distribution) Implementation Packages - The Easy Way to Certification

 

Practical Internal Auditor Training for Food Operations - Available via the previous webinar recording. Fantastic value at $97/per person, but don’t take our word for it, read the Customer Reviews here

 


Scampi

    Fellow

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 6,089 posts
  • 1645 thanks
1,835
Excellent

  • Canada
    Canada
  • Gender:Not Telling

Posted Yesterday, 11:52 AM

Better yet, swab gloves at end of shift and compare that to bare hands!

 

Gloves   eeeeew   (a hill I'm willing to die on)


  • 0

Please stop referring to me as Sir/sirs


Setanta

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 1,900 posts
  • 405 thanks
535
Excellent

  • United States
    United States
  • Gender:Female
  • Interests:Reading: historical fiction, fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Movies
    Gardening
    Birding

Posted Yesterday, 12:01 PM

If your compnay wants to sell to Costco, they mandate the use of gloves. 


  • 0

-Setanta         

 

 

 


Scampi

    Fellow

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 6,089 posts
  • 1645 thanks
1,835
Excellent

  • Canada
    Canada
  • Gender:Not Telling

Posted Yesterday, 01:37 PM

If your compnay wants to sell to Costco, they mandate the use of gloves. 

Unless you never touch the product

We sell to Costco and have an exemption


  • 0

Please stop referring to me as Sir/sirs


Setanta

    Grade - FIFSQN

  • IFSQN Fellow
  • 1,900 posts
  • 405 thanks
535
Excellent

  • United States
    United States
  • Gender:Female
  • Interests:Reading: historical fiction, fantasy, Sci-Fi
    Movies
    Gardening
    Birding

Posted Yesterday, 01:45 PM

Unless you never touch the product

We sell to Costco and have an exemption

 

 

Not the case for the OP. 


  • 0

-Setanta         

 

 

 


rmoriarty

    Grade - Active

  • IFSQN Active
  • 3 posts
  • 0 thanks
0
Neutral

  • United States
    United States

Posted Yesterday, 03:58 PM

Thank you all for the insight! I think that setting up a quarterly or annual verification / monitoring program may be the best way to go about this. If anyone has performed similar studies and has advice on designs I'd love the info!


  • 0



Share this


1 user(s) are reading this topic

0 members, 1 guests, 0 anonymous users