Pink Floyd

  • Posted: September 15th, 2010 - 5:12am by Doug Powell

    People shouldn’t work preparing or serving food when they are sick because they may spread the illness. That’s become a food safety mantra, and yet outbreaks are repeatedly traced back to sick food workers – like the 300 who got sick with norovirus at the Haaaaarvard faculty club earlier this year after 14 food service employees were discovered to be working while sick. Or the 529 who got sick with norovirus at Heston Blumenthal’s Fat Duck restaurant last year, where again, the presence of sick food workers was cited as a contributing factor to the outbreak.

    There’s a difference between saying what should be done – sick workers stay at home – and actually doing it – food service workers may get fired, whether they work with divas or in dives.

    Medical doctors are the same.

    The Associated Press reports more than half of doctors in training said in a survey that they'd shown up sick to work, and almost one-third said they'd done it more than once.

    Dr. Anupam Jena, a medical resident at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, developed food poisoning symptoms halfway through an overnight shift last year, but said he didn't think he was contagious or that his illness hampered his ability to take care of patients.

    Jena, a study co-author, said getting someone else to take over his shift on short notice "was not worth the cost of working while a bit sick." He was not among the survey participants.

    The researchers analyzed an anonymous survey of 537 medical residents at 12 hospitals around the country conducted last year by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. The response rate was high; the hospitals were not identified.

    The results appear in Wednesday's Journal of the American Medical Association.

    Nearly 58 percent of the respondents said they'd worked at least once while sick and 31 percent said they'd worked more than once while sick in the previous year.

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    Doctors, Food Service, Pink Floyd, Sick, the wall, work
  • Posted: March 12th, 2010 - 7:21am by Doug Powell

    The British rock band Pink Floyd, a favorite for North American food service workers, won its court battle with EMI on Thursday, with a ruling that prevents the record company from selling single downloads on the Internet from the group’s concept albums.

    Is that good or bad for restaurant back kitchens across the nation? The tune, Time, holds up well on its own, but the band wants the listener to experience the entire Dark Side of the Moon experience, which was fairly groovy when it came out in the 1970s, but a little dated, slow and self-indulgent today.

    And who says rock’n roll is about attitude. Pink Floyd’s body of work is a coveted commodity. The band members Roger Waters, David Gilmour and Nick Mason all appeared on the 2009 Sunday Times Rich List with personal fortunes estimated at £85 million, £78 million and £50 million respectively.

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  • Posted: September 15th, 2008 - 9:54pm by Doug Powell

    PhD student Ben Chapman went and worked in a restaurant as part of his food safety research. He saw lots of things, but his most memorable description of kitchen work was that he had to listen to a lot of Pink Floyd.

    There was some Tom Petty, and The Clash, but a lot of Pink Floyd. So it was with a nod and a lighter raised in the air to food service workers everywhere upon hearing the nears that founding Floyd keyboardist Richard Wright passed today.

    But Pink Floyd doesn’t get much airplay in the Midwest. For a full accounting of why the Midwest is home to terrible hair metal, check out Chuck Klosterman’s Fargo Rock City, which Chapman loaned me a couple of years ago. And today, a barfblog reader e-mailed me to say,

    “What I find most amusing about these Listeria posts is the album cover from the (very horrible and untalented) metal band.”
     
    A few e-mails later, and she says,

    “There is at least one metal band for every disease, especially those involving vomit, blood, decay, puss, gangreen or amptutation.

    “I just found
    ascaris, a death metal band in denver.  i think this should be an ongoing theme - each post should have an accompanying death metal promotion."

    But the best was when she linked me to a Strongbad post – Amy’s been a fan for years – about cliché metal bands. The comments section of barfblog.com is developing nicely.
     

     

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