Ohio Providing Safe Food ServSafe Practice Test
Practice with real OH Providing Safe Food exam questions and detailed explanations. 1,000+ real questions across all 7 exam sections.
Questions
~12 scored questions on the exam
Passing Score
75% overall (60/80)%
Time Limit
2 hours for the full exam
Prerequisites
None โ anyone can take the ServSafe Manager exam
What is the Providing Safe Food Test?
Providing Safe Food covers the foundations of food safety, including foodborne illness, high-risk populations, and the role of government agencies in food safety regulation. This section establishes why food safety matters and introduces the key threats to food safety in a commercial kitchen.
Foundation of food safety โ understanding why safe food matters and who is most at risk
Topic Breakdown
Foodborne Illness
~4 questions
- Common foodborne pathogens (Salmonella, E. coli, Norovirus, Listeria)
- Symptoms and onset times for major foodborne illnesses
- How foodborne illness outbreaks occur and spread
High-Risk Populations
~3 questions
- Identifying highly susceptible populations (elderly, children, immunocompromised)
- Special precautions for healthcare and childcare facilities
- Menu restrictions for high-risk groups
Food Safety Regulations
~3 questions
- Role of the FDA, USDA, and state/local health departments
- The FDA Food Code and how it applies to food service
- Health department inspections and compliance requirements
Costs of Foodborne Illness
~2 questions
- Legal liability and lawsuits from foodborne illness outbreaks
- Lost revenue, negative publicity, and business closure
- Employee illness and staff shortages
Free Practice Questions
10 questionsQuestion 1 of 10
A restaurant experiences a foodborne illness outbreak affecting 15 customers. What is a likely business consequence?
Browse Ohio Providing Safe Food Questions
- 1. A restaurant experiences a foodborne illness outbreak affecting 15 customers. What is a likely business consequence?
- 2. Which federal agency develops the Food Code used by most states and local jurisdictions?
- 3. What is a foodborne illness?
- 4. What does TCS stand for in food safety?
- 5. Who has the authority to inspect restaurants and issue permits to food establishments?
- 6. A food handler notices a coworker not washing hands after handling raw chicken. What should they do?
- 7. A hospital cafeteria serves patients who have received organ transplants. Why is this considered a high-risk situation?
- 8. Which of the following is an example of a TCS food?
- 9. A daycare center orders catered lunch for children ages 2-4. What special consideration should the caterer keep in mind?
- 10. A cook uses the same cutting board for raw chicken and then lettuce without cleaning. This is an example of:
Study Tips for Ohio
- 1Memorize the Big Six foodborne pathogens and their characteristics
- 2Know which populations are considered highly susceptible and why
- 3Understand the difference between foodborne infection, intoxication, and toxin-mediated infection
- 4Review the roles of FDA, USDA, CDC, and state health departments
- 5Learn the common symptoms that require excluding or restricting food handlers
Ohio Food Safety Information
Manager Cert Required
Yes
Handler Cert Required
No
Certification Renewal
Every 5 years
Ohio Department of Health
Official Food Safety Portal โCareer Opportunities
Frequently Asked Questions
The ServSafe Manager exam is a food safety certification test with 90 questions (80 scored, 10 pilot). You need 75% (60 out of 80) to pass. The certification is accredited by ANSI and recognized across the food service industry.
Don't Guess on Your Ohio Providing Safe Food Test
Real questions. Detailed explanations. Pass on your first try.