Gulf News

Food safety managers required for schools

Person-in-Charge to implement nutritiona­l guidelines in food served at canteens

- BY SAJILA SASEENDRAN Senior Reporter

Dubai schools will be held more responsibl­e in making sure students eat healthy food at the school canteens, Gulf News has learnt.

By September, they will have to assign food safety managers known as Personsin-Charge or PICs who are trained to implement nutritiona­l guidelines in school canteens.

The Permits and Applied Nutrition Section of Dubai Municipali­ty’s Food Safety Department, which implements the nutritiona­l guidelines in school canteens developed in collaborat­ion with Dubai Health Authority, has sent out a circular in this regard to private schools.

The civic body had already made PICs for food safety mandatory for school canteens to enhance safety and hygiene of food served to schoolchil­dren. However, 30 per cent of schools have yet to have one, said a municipali­ty official.

The new rule has made it mandatory for them to be trained in nutritiona­l guidelines as well to ensure that children are served nutritious foods.

The nutritiona­l guidelines were issued in September 2017 as part of the school health policy aimed at reducing the incidence of childhood obesity and diabetes in children caused by over consumptio­n of unhealthy food and inadequate physical activities.

The focus is on declaratio­n of nutritiona­l informatio­n of foods served to kids; control over portion size and restrictio­ns on unhealthy foods such as fatty, sugary items.

Schools were given time to implement these guidelines, said Jehaina Al Ali, principal food studies and surveys officer in the Permits and Applied Nutrition Section.

“Now we want to ensure 100 per cent compliance of the guidelines from the new academic year starting in September,” she told Gulf News.

A new module on nutritiona­l guidelines has been added to the training materials for the PICs and the municipali­ty will start piloting it from July.

There are more than 300 private schools in Dubai, which form about 70 per cent of schools in the UAE. PICs for canteens in these schools must be someone from the school side.

“The food suppliers should have their own PICs for their business. But they cannot replace the school PICs. We prefer schools assigning a PIC from their side for the benefit of the students,” Al Ali said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates