Lesson 2 of 5
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Lesson 2: Personal Hygiene and Professional Conduct

Jukka 07.03.2026

Vertical high-resolution infographic titled with subtitle "Hygiene, Grooming, Illness Reporting & Wound Management — GMP & HACCP compliance." Clean modern vector/illustrative style using a calming palette (blues, teals, greens), realistic detailed icons, red X warnings and green checkmarks, and diverse food workers in production/retail/kitchen scenes. Left column: grooming & cleanliness do/don't panels showing clean uniforms and appropriate protective clothing (hairnets, beard covers, masks, aprons), safe closed-toe slip-resistant footwear, no jewelry/no perfumes, close-up icons and small hazard markers for physical (rings), chemical (spray bottle) and microbiological (germs). Center: detailed sequential handwashing station (wet, lather, scrub palms/back, between fingers, thumbs, fingertips, rinse, dry) with clock/timer and soap-suds detail; adjacent glove-use and glove-change reminders, clean workstation visuals and cross-contamination prevention (separate cutting boards, labeled containers). Right column: illness-reporting & fitness-to-work flowchart with symptom icons (fever, vomiting, diarrhea, jaundice, sore throat), worker reporting to supervisor (phone/clipboard), decision boxes labeled "Report, Exclude, Seek medical advice," and an "Audit-ready" stamp; small legal-compliance panel with Thai flag outline and book icon labeled "Thai food law / GMP & HACCP." Bottom: wound-management close-up showing waterproof dressing under glove, step-by-step dressing and disposal (sealed bag, replace if wet) with do/don't visuals. Scattered supporting elements: inspector checklist clipboard, magnifying-glass cleanliness highlight, prohibition icons for eating, smoking, phones in food areas, and small labels citing "Reduce physical, chemical, microbiological hazards." Information-dense, highly legible, balanced layout suitable as an article header or printable training poster.

Personal hygiene is one of the most effective—and most closely inspected—controls for preventing food contamination. Regardless of whether you work in food production, wholesale, retail, or hospitality, your everyday habits directly affect product safety, customer health, and your workplace’s compliance with Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) and HACCP-based procedures. In practice, food safety is not only about what you do at a workstation; it also includes how you present yourself, how you manage health issues, and how consistently you follow rules in food areas.

This lesson explains the daily hygiene behaviors and professional conduct expected of food handlers to reduce contamination risk. You will review grooming and cleanliness standards (including clean uniforms, appropriate protective clothing, hair control, and safe footwear), as well as workplace behaviors that are prohibited in food production, preparation, storage, and service areas because they can introduce physical, chemical, or microbiological hazards.

You will also learn how to make safe, legally compliant decisions about working while unwell. Recognizing symptoms, reporting illness promptly, and following fitness-to-work rules are essential for preventing foodborne illness and for meeting inspection expectations. Finally, you will cover practical wound management, including when and how to use waterproof dressings so that cuts, burns, and skin conditions do not become a contamination source.

Throughout the lesson, the expectations are aligned with routine enforcement practices and relevant Thai food law requirements for food handler hygiene and conduct, helping you remain audit-ready and protect consumers every day.