Prevention
These steps can help prevent food poisoning:
Wash your hands and clean any dishes or utensils when you are making or serving food.
Keep juices from meat, poultry, and seafood away from ready-to-eat foods.
Cook foods to proper temperatures.
Promptly refrigerate any food you will not be eating right away.
If you take care of young children, wash your hands often and dispose of diapers carefully so that bacteria can't spread to other surfaces or people.
If you make canned food at home, make sure to follow proper canning techniques to prevent botulism.
Don't feed honey to children under 1 year of age.
Don't eat wild mushrooms.
When traveling where contamination is more likely, eat only hot, freshly cooked food. Boil water before drinking. Don't eat raw vegetables or unpeeled fruit.
Always refrigerate fish.
Don't eat tropical fish caught during blooms of poison plankton.
Eat pufferfish only in specially licensed restaurants with chefs trained to cook it.
Don't eat shellfish exposed to red tides.
If others may have eaten a food that made you sick, let them know. If you think the food was contaminated when you bought it from a store or restaurant, tell the staff and your local health department.
Treatment Plan
Treatment for most cases of food poisoning involve replacing fluids and electrolytes (such as sodium, potassium, magnesium, and chloride). While experiencing vomiting and diarrhea, the person should avoid solid food but increase clear liquids. In more severe cases, a person may need help either breathing or stopping vomiting. In most cases, health care providers do not prescribe antibiotics because they may prolong diarrhea. If you have eaten certain toxins (such as from mushrooms or shellfish), your health care provider may take steps to clean out your stomach (a process called lavage, or pumping the stomach) and administer activated charcoal, which can help absorb the remaining toxin.
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