While the Food Safety and the Health departments continue to haggle
about the jurisdiction of work on raids conducted in hotels and
restaurants, the government is still to come clear on a grave issue
concerning public health.
M.M. Abbas, public health activist, told The Hindu that the spat
was in the open because there was no State-level coordination. Only if
there was a directive to both the departments, the district
administration could coordinate their functioning.
The Health department, endowed with a strong strength of personnel at
the grassroots level, could either be redeployed or trained by the Food
Safety Department. The skeletal strength of Food Safety Department was
inadequate, said Mr. Abbas.
Senior Food Safety Officials told The Hindu that the raids were
conducted in violation of the Health Department directive. However, an
official indicated that the issue would have come up if the Health had
informed the Food Safety department and sought their cooperation too in
the raids. It would save the Health department of any legal hurdle, the
official said.
However, the Health department officials justify the raids as being part of the Safe Kerala Clean Kerala campaign.
Hotels are inspected to see if they maintain a clean and hygienic
environment while serving food to customers, said P. N. Sreenivasan,
district health officer (rural). “We do not have the mandate to test the
quality of food,” he said. However, what can be detected by naked eye,
like fungus on food or worm-infested foods is destroyed, he said.
Legally, the Health Department might not find a firm footing int the
courts, said Mr. Abbas.
While the hotels and restaurant owners are crying foul about the Health
Department not having a mandate to inspect hotels, Mr. Sreenivasan
believes that there is no legal hurdle in inspecting a hotel premises if
it is creating circumstances that could spread diseases. In case of any
large-scale food poisoning or breakout of water-borne diseases like
typhoid or hepatitis A, it is the Health department that is held
responsible, argued Mr. Sreenivasan.
Justifying the actions carried out by the Health Department for the last
three years, he said it had definitely helped bring down water-borne
diseases.
Compared to the numbers three years ago, incidents of typhoid and
hepatitis A have come down drastically from 182 typhoid cases reported
in 2011 to 8 cases so far this year, and from 274 hepatitis A in 2011 to
14 so far this year.
Mr. Sreenivasan says the nearly 400-strong team of health inspectors,
supervisors and technical assistants available at the grassroots level
are being deployed to ensure that food and water that people consume in
homes and outside homes does not spread communicable diseases.
On a regular basis Health inspectors across the rural area take part in
chlorination activity of wells and other water resources on the seventh
day of the month and inspect hotels every 15th day of the month, said
Mr. Sreenivasan.
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