Press Release Headlines

DiningGrades.com Now Offers Free Food Poisoning Reporting

DiningGrades.com announces the release of a free and easy to use food poisoning reporting system. The system reduces confusion on where, and simplifies how restaurant patrons report a suspected food poisoning event.

DENVER, June 26, 2014 /PRNewswire/ — Until now, no convenient, universal reporting system for reporting food poisoning has been widely available. Restaurant patrons can now freely report a suspected restaurant food poisoning event on DiningGrades.com and provide critical information to restaurant management, the respective health department and other diners.

Photo – http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20140625/121543

You think you got sick from eating at a restaurant. Who to tell? Calling the restaurant manager likely gets a polite denial. Calling the health department entangles you in inter-department transfers. Even healthcare providers find the telephone maze difficult. Share your concern on a blog or rating system and the information may not be acted upon. There has to be a better system.

DiningGrades.com has developed an innovative solution solving a need for reporting suspected restaurant food poisoning. It is free, easy and intuitive.

  • After selecting the restaurant, the user answers a limited number of questions about the event.
  • Contact information, for corroboration by experts, is added.
  • DiningGrades.com staff reviews the report.
  • The report can be sent to the respective restaurant management team, the respective state or community health department.
  • An alert is noted on the DiningGrades.com website/mobile devices for other diners.

Harlan Stueven MD, DiningGrades.com Founder says, "DiningGrades.com gives the restaurant patron an innovative, easy method to report a suspected event. The system simplifies and increases reporting of restaurant suspected food poisoning events."

Many food poisoning events go unreported. In a nine-month New York social media study, 3 outbreaks were discovered not previously reported. Surveillance of social media is time intensive and not a reasonable method for most health departments. Until now, no convenient, universal reporting system has been widely available.

The Centers for Disease Control supports innovative surveillance efforts and offers an opinion in a May 2014 report, "health departments might consider additional surveillance methods to capture illness reports from those more likely to post a restaurant review online than to contact a health department."

"DiningGrades.com is committed to improvement of food safety and enhancement of public health so with this announcement," Dr. Stueven says, "we are offering this service free to any public health department and healthcare providers."

The reporting system has been freely available to restaurant patrons and has wide universal application.

Dining Grades LLC was founded in 2010, and has thousands of users and ratings in all 50 states with a mission to promote food safety by increasing public awareness and formation of partnerships within the food industry. Designed by physicians and a health department inspector, DiningGrades.com also offers restaurant patrons a tool to grade restaurants on cleanliness, satisfaction and recommendation. Those users who choose to become "Secret Diners" have an exclusive opportunity to grade a restaurant on cleanliness using a copyrighted demerit based questionnaire that leads to a more comprehensive grade.

Together the suspected food poisoning event reporting system and the grading system offer the dining pubic the ability to make informed dining choices.

Contact:
Harlan A Stueven MD
Founder
DiningGrades.com
262-227-9829
Email