COVID-19 pandemic: CDC develops toolkit for assessing meat, poultry processing facilities

Washington — A new online toolkit from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is intended to assist safety professionals and health officials in assessing COVID-19 pandemic-related prevention and control measures at meat and poultry processing facilities.

CDC says that although handling meat products does not expose workers to the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, “their work environments – processing lines and other areas in busy plants where they have close contact with co-workers and supervisors – may contribute substantially to their potential exposures.”

The toolkit features a pair of quick reference guides – available in 14 languages – that outline recommendations and strategies for preventing the spread of COVID-19 in meat and poultry processing facilities.

Additionally, CDC provides a facility assessment checklist it recommends employers complete when they form control plans, as well as each time the plan is revised. The agency offers guidance for pre-assessment, facility walkthrough and post-assessment scenarios, as well as lists numerous pandemic control measures in conjunction with CDC/OSHA guidance. These include:

  • Work environments configured for spacing of at least 6 feet apart between workers
  • Workers not facing each other when possible
  • Use of physical barriers, such as partitions, to separate workers in production areas when 6 feet of spacing isn’t possible
  • Adjusting and staggering shifts, break times, and/or meals to promote physical distancing
  • Providing hand sanitizer stations in multiple locations, as well as training on hand hygiene and cough/sneeze etiquette
  • Implementing a screening strategy for all individuals entering a workplace

- Digital Partners -
 

On the checklist, CDC notes that “not every row would necessarily need to be checked ‘Yes’ to have an effective program and an effective set of controls in place at a given facility.” The agency says consultation between worksites and safety professionals – with input from health officials as needed – is necessary to ensure facilities meet CDC/OSHA guidance.

- Digital Partners -

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