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Time & Temperature (NYC)

40 câu hỏi
1. According to the NYC Health Code, what is the Temperature Danger Zone in which bacteria multiply rapidly?
a.32°F to 100°F
b.41°F to 140°F
c.45°F to 135°F
d.50°F to 150°F

NYC materials define the Temperature Danger Zone as 41°F to 140°F; TCS food held in this range lets bacteria grow to unsafe levels. Note NYC uses 140°F, not the generic 135°F, as the upper bound tied to hot holding. Cold food must stay at 41°F or below and hot food at 140°F or above.

NYC Health Code Article 81
2. At what maximum temperature must cold TCS food be held under the NYC Health Code?
a.50°F
b.45°F
c.38°F
d.41°F

Cold TCS food must be held at 41°F or below in NYC; 41°F is the maximum allowed cold-holding temperature. At 45°F or 50°F the food is inside the danger zone and pathogens can grow. 38°F is also safe but is not the maximum the code specifies.

NYC Health Code Article 81
3. A steam table at a Manhattan cafeteria holds cooked rice and beans. Under NYC rules, what is the minimum hot-holding temperature?
a.140°F
b.125°F
c.130°F
d.110°F

NYC requires hot TCS food to be held at 140°F or above, which is higher than the generic FDA 135°F. Below 140°F the food enters the danger zone. Supervisors should check hot-holding temperatures regularly with a calibrated thermometer.

NYC Health Code Article 81
4. A cook roasts whole chickens at a NYC restaurant. What is the minimum internal cooking temperature for poultry?
a.145°F for 15 seconds
b.158°F for 15 seconds
c.165°F for 15 seconds
d.140°F for 15 seconds

Poultry (chicken, turkey, duck), as well as stuffed meats and stuffing, must reach a minimum internal temperature of 165°F for 15 seconds — the highest cooking requirement because poultry commonly carries Salmonella and Campylobacter. Lower temperatures like 145°F or 158°F are for other foods. Always verify with a thermometer in the thickest part.

NYC Health Code Article 81
5. Under NYC food safety instruction, what is the minimum internal cooking temperature for ground meat such as hamburger?
a.145°F
b.165°F
c.158°F
d.140°F

NYC teaches a minimum internal temperature of 158°F for ground meat like ground beef, pork, and other chopped meats, which is higher than the generic FDA figure. Grinding spreads surface pathogens like E. coli O157:H7 throughout the meat, so the whole mass must reach a safe temperature. 145°F applies to whole cuts and 165°F to poultry.

NYC Health Code Article 81
6. What is the minimum internal cooking temperature for whole cuts of pork, beef, veal, lamb, and fish?
a.145°F for 15 seconds
b.158°F for 15 seconds
c.165°F for 15 seconds
d.135°F for 15 seconds

Whole intact cuts of pork, beef, veal, lamb, and fish must reach 145°F for 15 seconds, because pathogens are on the surface and are seared away as the outside cooks. Ground meats need 158°F in NYC and poultry needs 165°F because contamination is distributed throughout. 135°F is a holding temperature, not a cooking temperature.

NYC Health Code Article 81
7. A cook at a Brooklyn kitchen makes a large batch of chili to cool. In NYC's two-stage cooling rule, the food must drop from 140°F to 70°F within how long?
a.6 hours
b.1 hour
c.4 hours
d.2 hours

In the first cooling stage, TCS food must cool from 140°F down to 70°F within 2 hours. This is the most critical stage because bacteria grow fastest in the upper danger zone. If the food has not reached 70°F within 2 hours, it must be reheated or discarded.

NYC Health Code Article 81
8. Continuing NYC's cooling rule, after food reaches 70°F it must then be cooled to 41°F within how many additional hours (for a total of 6)?
a.2 additional hours
b.4 additional hours
c.6 additional hours
d.8 additional hours

After reaching 70°F within the first 2 hours, the food must be cooled from 70°F to 41°F within 4 more hours, for a total cooling time of 6 hours. Keeping to this schedule limits the time bacteria spend in the danger zone. Shallow pans, ice baths, and ice wands help meet these limits.

NYC Health Code Article 81
9. A cook reheats yesterday's soup for hot holding on the steam table. To what temperature and within what time must previously cooked TCS food be reheated in NYC?
a.140°F within 4 hours
b.155°F within 1 hour
c.165°F for 15 seconds within 2 hours
d.145°F within 2 hours

TCS food that was cooked, cooled, and is being reheated for hot holding must reach 165°F for 15 seconds within 2 hours. Rapid reheating limits the time in the danger zone, and the 165°F target destroys bacteria that may have grown. Food reheated for immediate service to order has more flexibility, but for hot holding this rule applies.

NYC Health Code Article 81
10. To calibrate a bimetallic stem thermometer using the ice-point method, you place it in an ice-water slush and adjust it to read:
a.32°F
b.41°F
c.0°F
d.212°F

In the ice-point method, a thermometer placed in a slush of crushed ice and water should read 32°F, the freezing point of water; if it does not, you adjust it to 32°F. This is the most common calibration method in kitchens. 212°F is the boiling-point method at sea level, not the ice point.

11. Which is an approved method for thawing frozen TCS food?
a.On the counter at room temperature overnight
b.In the refrigerator at 41°F or below
c.In a warm oven at 120°F
d.In standing warm water at 100°F

Approved thawing methods include thawing in the refrigerator at 41°F or below, under running water at 70°F or below, in the microwave if cooked immediately, or as part of the cooking process. Leaving food on the counter or in warm water and ovens lets the surface enter the danger zone while the center is still frozen. Refrigerator thawing is the safest, most controlled method.

NYC Health Code Article 81
12. Why is the danger zone so hazardous? Within it, a single bacterium can double approximately every:
a.24 hours
b.6 hours
c.3 hours
d.20 minutes

In the danger zone (41°F to 140°F in NYC), bacteria can double roughly every 20 minutes under ideal conditions, so a few cells can become millions in just a few hours. This is why minimizing time in the zone during cooling, holding, and prep is critical. Slower doubling times do not reflect the real risk.

13. A cook checks the temperature of a chicken breast. Where should the thermometer stem be placed for an accurate reading?
a.In the thickest part of the food, away from bone, fat, and gristle
b.Just under the surface skin
c.Touching the bottom of the pan
d.Against the bone for a faster reading

For an accurate internal reading, insert the thermometer stem into the thickest part of the food, avoiding bone, fat, and gristle, which conduct heat differently and give false readings. Touching the pan measures the pan, not the food. Checking the thickest part ensures the coldest spot has reached the safe temperature.

14. A supervisor finds cut melon on the salad bar reading 50°F. According to NYC cold-holding rules, the food is:
a.Fine, since 50°F is below room temperature
b.In the danger zone (above 41°F) — corrective action is required, such as rapid cooling if within time limits or discarding
c.Safe because melon is a fruit
d.Safe as long as it looks fresh

Cut melon is a TCS food that must be held at 41°F or below; at 50°F it is in the danger zone and out of compliance. The supervisor must take corrective action — determine how long it has been out of temperature, rapidly re-cool it if still within allowable time, or discard it. Appearance and being a fruit do not make it safe.

NYC Health Code Article 81
15. During a lunch rush, a supervisor checks the steam table and finds rice at 128°F. Per NYC hot-holding rules, what should the supervisor do?
a.Nothing; 128°F is acceptable for hot holding
b.Add more rice on top and keep serving
c.Lower the steam table setting to save energy
d.Reheat the rice rapidly to 165°F within 2 hours and correct the steam table so it holds at 140°F or above

Hot TCS food must be held at 140°F or above in NYC; 128°F is in the danger zone. The supervisor must reheat the rice quickly to 165°F within 2 hours (if within allowable time) and fix the equipment to maintain 140°F or higher. Adding more food or ignoring it lets bacteria multiply.

NYC Health Code Article 81
16. Using the boiling-point method to calibrate a thermometer at sea level in NYC, the device should read:
a.180°F
b.165°F
c.212°F
d.200°F

At sea level, pure water boils at 212°F, so a thermometer held in boiling water should read 212°F; if not, you adjust it. NYC is at sea level, so no altitude correction is needed. The ice-point method (32°F) is generally preferred because it is safer and easier.

17. When receiving a delivery of fresh (not frozen) chicken at a NYC restaurant, at what temperature should the cold TCS product be to be accepted?
a.41°F or below
b.50°F or below
c.70°F or below
d.Any temperature if it is used the same day

Cold TCS foods like fresh poultry should be received at 41°F or below; deliveries above this may have been temperature-abused and should be rejected. Checking product temperature at receiving is a key control point. Same-day use does not excuse accepting unsafe temperatures.

NYC Health Code Article 81
18. How often should a supervisor check the temperatures of TCS food during holding, as a best practice?
a.Once a week
b.Only when the inspector visits
c.At least every 2 hours, correcting before food falls out of safe temperature, often recorded on a log
d.Never, if equipment is new

TCS food temperatures should be checked at least every 2 hours during holding so problems are caught before food spends too long in the danger zone; many operations log the readings. Checking only weekly or during inspections leaves long unmonitored gaps. Even new equipment can fail, so monitoring is always required.

19. Which method helps TCS food cool quickly enough to meet NYC's 2-hour and 4-hour cooling limits?
a.Placing a tightly covered 8-inch-deep pot directly in the walk-in
b.Dividing food into shallow pans, using an ice-water bath, adding ice as an ingredient, or using an ice paddle, then refrigerating loosely covered
c.Leaving it on the counter to cool to room temperature first
d.Stacking hot pans on top of each other in the cooler

Rapid cooling is achieved by increasing surface area and heat transfer: shallow pans, ice-water baths, ice paddles or wands, or adding ice as an ingredient, then refrigerating loosely covered. A deep covered pot cools far too slowly, and counter cooling wastes the critical first stage. Stacking hot pans traps heat.

NYC Health Code Article 81
20. Shell eggs that will be hot-held for later service (not cooked to order) must be cooked to a minimum internal temperature of:
a.145°F
b.150°F
c.158°F
d.155°F

Shell eggs cooked to order for immediate service need 145°F, but eggs cooked for hot holding, like a batch of scrambled eggs on a buffet, must reach 155°F for 15 seconds. The higher temperature accounts for the food being held rather than served immediately. Ground meats in NYC require 158°F and poultry 165°F.

NYC Health Code Article 81
21. A customer orders a dish and the cook reheats a previously cooked component to serve it right away (not for hot holding). What temperature rule applies?
a.It must reach 165°F within 2 hours
b.It must reach 158°F
c.It must reach 140°F within 30 minutes
d.There is no minimum reheat temperature for TCS food reheated for immediate service to order, though rapid heating is still good practice

Food reheated for immediate service to a customer's order has no specified minimum reheating temperature, since it will be eaten right away; the strict 165°F-within-2-hours rule applies to food reheated for hot holding. Even so, heating quickly through the danger zone is good practice. Commercially processed ready-to-eat food reheated for hot holding needs at least 135°F to 140°F.

NYC Health Code Article 81
22. Which statement about freezing TCS food is correct?
a.Freezing kills all bacteria, making food sterile
b.Freezing stops or slows bacterial growth but does not kill all bacteria, which can resume growing when thawed
c.Frozen food can never cause illness
d.Freezing raises the food's temperature over time

Freezing halts or greatly slows bacterial growth, but it does not kill all bacteria; surviving organisms can multiply again once the food thaws into the danger zone. That is why thawing must be controlled and food must still be cooked to required temperatures. Freezing is a preservation method, not a kill step, except for parasites under specified freezing parameters.

23. A NYC concession stand wants to hold hot dogs using time instead of temperature control. If food is removed from temperature control, it must be marked and discarded after a maximum of:
a.8 hours
b.12 hours
c.4 hours when time alone is the control and food starts at a safe temperature
d.24 hours

When time alone is used as a public health control, TCS food must be labeled with a discard time and thrown out after at most 4 hours; a 6-hour option exists only if the food stays at or below 70°F and starts at 41°F. This works only with written procedures and clear labeling. After the time limit, remaining food must be discarded, not returned to storage.

NYC Health Code Article 81
24. Why does NYC require poultry to be cooked to a higher temperature (165°F) than a whole beef steak (145°F)?
a.Poultry more commonly carries pathogens like Salmonella and Campylobacter throughout, requiring a higher temperature to ensure safety
b.Poultry is denser than beef
c.Beef never carries any bacteria
d.The color of poultry requires more heat

Poultry frequently carries Salmonella and Campylobacter and needs 165°F to ensure destruction, while an intact beef steak has pathogens mainly on the surface, which searing addresses, so 145°F suffices. Ground meats fall in between (158°F in NYC) because grinding spreads surface bacteria throughout. Density and color are not the safety basis.

NYC Health Code Article 81
25. A cook thaws shrimp under running water. To be safe, the water must be:
a.Hot, at least 120°F
b.Running, potable (drinkable) water at 70°F or below, with the food not staying in the danger zone too long
c.Standing still in a warm sink
d.At exactly 140°F

Thawing under running water requires potable water at 70°F or below, with enough flow to wash away loosened particles, and the food should not stay in the danger zone longer than allowed. Hot or 140°F water would push the surface into the danger zone and start cooking unevenly. Standing warm water is not an approved method.

NYC Health Code Article 81
26. What is the total maximum time allowed to cool TCS food from 140°F to 41°F under NYC's two-stage cooling rule?
a.2 hours
b.4 hours
c.8 hours
d.6 hours

The total cooling window is 6 hours: 2 hours to go from 140°F to 70°F, then 4 more hours to go from 70°F to 41°F. If either stage is missed, the food must be reheated (if within limits) or discarded. Splitting the process into stages targets the most dangerous upper range first.

NYC Health Code Article 81
27. When should a food thermometer be calibrated?
a.Regularly, and especially after it is dropped, exposed to temperature extremes, or when accuracy is in doubt
b.Only once, when it is purchased
c.Never; thermometers are always accurate
d.Only at the end of the year

Thermometers should be calibrated on a regular schedule and particularly after being dropped, exposed to extreme heat or cold, or whenever readings seem off. A miscalibrated thermometer can make unsafe food appear safe. Assuming permanent accuracy risks serving undercooked or temperature-abused food.

28. A new supervisor trained outside NYC says hot food only needs to stay above 135°F. In NYC, what should the supervisor enforce?
a.135°F is fine in NYC too
b.125°F is acceptable
c.Hot TCS food must be held at 140°F or above, the NYC standard
d.Any temperature above room temperature

While the generic FDA Food Code uses 135°F, NYC Health Code and course material set the hot-holding minimum at 140°F, so the supervisor must enforce 140°F or above. Using the lower 135°F figure would not meet NYC requirements. Knowing these NYC-specific values is important for the person in charge.

NYC Health Code Article 81
29. Commercially processed, ready-to-eat food (such as canned chili) that is being heated for hot holding must reach at least:
a.165°F
b.158°F
c.180°F
d.135°F to 140°F (up to the NYC hot-holding temperature)

Commercially processed, ready-to-eat foods reheated for hot holding need only be brought up to the hot-holding temperature (135°F under FDA, 140°F in NYC), because they were already cooked in a controlled facility. Food cooked, cooled, and reheated in-house must reach the stricter 165°F within 2 hours. Knowing the difference prevents both unsafe practice and unnecessary quality loss.

NYC Health Code Article 81
30. A NYC supervisor sets up a system to monitor cooking, cooling, holding, and reheating temperatures. This documentation is best described as:
a.A temperature log used as part of active managerial control to verify time-temperature safety
b.An unnecessary formality
c.A marketing tool
d.Only required for frozen desserts

A temperature log records cooking, cooling, holding, and reheating temperatures so the supervisor can verify that critical limits are met and catch deviations early — a core part of active managerial control. It supports corrective action and demonstrates compliance to inspectors. It is not a mere formality or limited to one food type.

NYC Health Code Article 81
31. A cook needs to cool a large pot of stock quickly to meet NYC limits. The most effective single step is to:
a.Cover it tightly and leave it deep in the pot in the walk-in
b.Set it on the counter with a lid
c.Transfer it to shallow pans and place them in an ice-water bath, stirring, then refrigerate loosely covered
d.Add hot water to thin it out

Transferring stock to shallow pans in an ice-water bath and stirring dramatically increases surface area and heat transfer, helping meet the 140°F-to-70°F-in-2-hours target. A deep covered pot or counter cooling traps heat and fails the limits. Adding hot water only slows cooling.

NYC Health Code Article 81
32. Fish that will be cooked must reach a minimum internal temperature of 145°F. What is required instead for fish that will be served raw (like sushi)?
a.Nothing special is required
b.It must be frozen to required parameters to destroy parasites before raw service
c.It must be cooked to 165°F
d.It must be held at 140°F

Fish intended to be cooked must reach 145°F, but fish served raw or undercooked must first be frozen to specified time-temperature parameters (for example, -4°F for 7 days or colder for a shorter time) to destroy parasites like Anisakis. Cooking to 165°F is a poultry requirement, not for raw fish. Approved suppliers often provide documentation of the required freezing.

NYC Health Code Article 81
33. A large pan of lasagna is left to cool covered on a prep table for 3 hours before refrigerating. What is the NYC time-temperature problem?
a.It likely stayed in the danger zone too long — it must reach 70°F within 2 hours, and covering plus counter cooling slows heat loss
b.There is no problem with this method
c.Cooling should always take place at room temperature for 6 hours
d.Lasagna is not a TCS food

Leaving lasagna covered on the counter for 3 hours very likely violates the first cooling stage (140°F to 70°F within 2 hours), because a covered, dense pan on a warm table loses heat slowly and lingers in the danger zone. It should be portioned into shallow pans and cooled with an ice bath or in the cooler, loosely covered. Lasagna's meat, cheese, and sauce make it a TCS food.

NYC Health Code Article 81
34. A NYC deli holds tuna salad on a self-serve bar packed in ice. For this to keep the food safe, the ice must:
a.Only touch the bottom of the pan
b.Be replaced once a day
c.Surround the container up to the food level so the product stays at 41°F or below, with the temperature checked regularly
d.Be flavored ice for presentation only

Using ice for cold holding works only if the ice surrounds the food container up to the level of the food, keeping the product at 41°F or below, and the temperature is monitored. Ice touching only the bottom leaves the upper food in the danger zone. The goal is genuine temperature control, not decoration.

NYC Health Code Article 81
35. Whole-muscle roasts (like a beef roast) may be cooked using lower temperatures held for longer times. This is allowed because:
a.Roasts contain no bacteria
b.Pathogen destruction depends on both temperature AND time — a slightly lower temperature held long enough achieves the same lethality
c.Roasts are always served rare regardless of safety
d.Time has no effect on bacteria

Cooking safety depends on the combination of temperature and time: a lower internal temperature held for a longer time can destroy pathogens as effectively as a higher temperature held briefly, which is why roasts have approved lower-temperature and longer-time tables. This does not mean roasts are pathogen-free or exempt from rules. Time is a genuine safety factor, not irrelevant.

36. When TCS food such as raw chicken pieces is cooked in a microwave, NYC and FDA guidance require cooking to a higher temperature and letting it stand. The food should be heated to:
a.145°F with no standing time
b.140°F
c.158°F only
d.165°F, then covered and allowed to stand before checking, because microwaves heat unevenly

Microwaves heat food unevenly, so raw animal foods cooked in them should be heated to 165°F, stirred or rotated during cooking, then covered to stand for the specified time so heat distributes and cold spots reach a safe temperature. Checking the temperature in several places is important. Lower targets or skipping stand time can leave undercooked spots.

NYC Health Code Article 81
37. A NYC restaurant offers hamburgers cooked to order below 158°F on request. What time-temperature-related requirement applies?
a.It is simply prohibited with no exceptions in all cases
b.The menu must carry a consumer advisory disclosing the risk of undercooked animal foods, and such items should not be served to highly susceptible populations
c.No disclosure is needed
d.Only the cook needs to know

When animal foods like burgers are served raw or undercooked below the required temperature on request, a consumer advisory must be posted on the menu disclosing the increased risk, and these items must not be served to highly susceptible populations such as those in hospitals or nursing homes. This lets informed adults decide while protecting vulnerable groups. Silent service without disclosure is not compliant.

NYC Health Code Article 81
38. Which type of thermometer is appropriate for checking the internal temperature of a thin hamburger patty?
a.A thermocouple or thin-tipped digital thermometer, because bimetallic stem thermometers may be too thick and read along the stem
b.A wall thermometer
c.An oven dial only
d.No thermometer is needed for thin foods

Thin foods like patties are best checked with a thermocouple or thin-tipped digital thermometer, since a bimetallic stem thermometer senses temperature along a portion of its stem and may not read a thin item accurately. Wall thermometers and oven dials measure air, not the food's internal temperature. Every cooked TCS food's temperature should be verified with an appropriate probe.

39. Ready-to-eat TCS food prepared in-house and held cold in a NYC walk-in must be date-marked and used within a maximum of:
a.24 hours
b.3 days
c.10 days at any temperature
d.7 days when held at 41°F or below (counting the prep day as day 1)

Ready-to-eat TCS food prepared on site and stored cold must be date-marked and used or discarded within 7 days when held at 41°F or below, with the preparation day counted as day one. This limits growth of pathogens like Listeria that survive refrigeration. Holding it longer, or warmer, increases risk and violates the rule.

NYC Health Code Article 81
40. A cook checks cooling soup and finds it is still 90°F after 2.5 hours. According to NYC time-temperature rules, the correct action is to:
a.Keep cooling slowly; it will get there eventually
b.Move it to hot holding at 90°F
c.Discard it — or, if still permitted and safe, immediately reheat to 165°F and restart proper rapid cooling — because it failed the 140°F-to-70°F-in-2-hours limit
d.Serve it immediately to avoid waste

The soup failed the first cooling stage (it must reach 70°F within 2 hours but was 90°F at 2.5 hours), so it must be discarded, or reheated to 165°F and re-cooled rapidly only if permitted and safe. Continuing to cool slowly or serving it lets bacteria and toxins reach dangerous levels. Recognizing a cooling failure and acting is a supervisor responsibility.

NYC Health Code Article 81

Cập nhật gần nhất: · quy trình kiểm tra

Đội Ngũ Biên Tập PrepPass · Đối chiếu với NYC Health Code Article 81 · Quy trình kiểm tra

New York City Food Protection Certificate Exam thi những gì?

New York City Food Protection Certificate Exam do New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH) tổ chức. Trọng số chủ đề dưới đây lấy từ đề cương thi chính thức — hãy ưu tiên học các chủ đề có trọng số cao nhất.

Số câu hỏi
50 multiple-choice questions; proctored in-person final exam at the Health Academy
Điểm đậu
70%

Phân bố chủ đề

  • 20%
    Time & Temperature (NYC)
  • 18%
    Foodborne Illness
  • 17%
    Contamination & Hygiene
  • 15%
    Pests & Facilities
  • 15%
    HACCP
  • 15%
    NYC Regulations (Article 81)

Kỳ thi này khó cỡ nào?

Độ khó trung bình. Kỳ thi Bảo vệ Thực phẩm NYC có giám sát và đóng sách, ~50 câu, 70% để đậu. Khó hơn thẻ food handler vì kiểm tra khả năng phán đoán của người giám sát theo Bộ luật Y tế NYC (vùng nguy hiểm 41-140°F, không phải số FDA chung).

Số giờ học khuyến nghị
8-15 giờ trong 1-2 tuần, cộng khóa học miễn phí của DOHMH.
Tỷ lệ đậu lần đầu (ước tính)
Đa số đậu trong 1-2 lần. Lỗi tập trung ở nhiệt độ riêng của NYC và quy tắc Điều 81.
Nên ưu tiên học đâu trước
Quy tắc thời gian-nhiệt độ NYC (41-140°F, thịt xay 158°F) và yêu cầu Điều 81.

Câu hỏi thường gặp

How many NYC Food Protection practice questions are here?+

240 original practice questions across all 6 topics — foodborne illness, NYC time-temperature rules, contamination & hygiene, pests & facilities, HACCP, and NYC regulations — in English and Español, with NYC Health Code Article 81 citations.

Is this NYC Food Protection practice test free?+

Yes — completely free, no signup. The official DOHMH course is free too; the proctored final exam at the Health Academy costs $24.60. PrepPass is a free study aid to help you pass it.

Are these real NYC Food Protection exam questions?+

No. All 240 questions are original prose written from the public-domain NYC Health Code Article 81 and DOHMH food-protection concepts. We never copy the real exam.

What temperatures does the NYC exam use?+

NYC uses its own values: the Temperature Danger Zone is 41°F to 140°F, hot holding is 140°F (not the generic FDA 135°F), and ground meat must be cooked to 158°F. Our questions use the NYC numbers.

How do I get the NYC Food Protection Certificate?+

Take the free 15-lesson online course from the NYC Health Academy (English, Spanish, Chinese, and more), then pass the proctored exam ($24.60, 70% to pass). The certificate does not expire, and a certificate-holder must be on site during operating hours.

What languages is the NYC course available in?+

The DOHMH course is offered in English, Spanish, Chinese, and other languages. PrepPass practice is available in English and Español.

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