Hazard analysis and critical control points Principles
HACCP Principles
- Conduct a hazard analysis
- Plans determine the food safety hazards and identify the preventive
measures the plan can apply to control these hazards. A food safety
hazard is any biological, chemical, or physical property that may cause a
food to be unsafe for human consumption.
- Identify critical control points
- A critical control point
(CCP) is a point, step, or procedure in a food manufacturing process at
which control can be applied and, as a result, a food safety hazard can
be prevented, eliminated, or reduced to an acceptable level.
- Establish critical limits for each critical control point
- A critical limit is the maximum or minimum value to which a
physical, biological, or chemical hazard must be controlled at a
critical control point to prevent, eliminate, or reduce to an acceptable
level.
- Establish critical control point monitoring requirements
- Monitoring activities are necessary to ensure that the process is
under control at each critical control point. In the United States, the FSIS requires that each monitoring procedure and its frequency be listed in the HACCP plan.
- Establish corrective actions
- These are actions to be taken when monitoring indicates a deviation
from an established critical limit. The final rule requires a plant's
HACCP plan to identify the corrective actions to be taken if a critical
limit is not met. Corrective actions are intended to ensure that no
product is injurious to health or otherwise adulterated as a result of
the deviation enters commerce.
- Establish procedures for ensuring the HACCP system is working as intended
- Validation ensures that the plants do what they were designed to do;
that is, they are successful in ensuring the production of a safe
product. Plants will be required to validate their own HACCP plans. FSIS
will not approve HACCP plans in advance, but will review them for
conformance with the final rule.
- Verification
ensures the HACCP plan is adequate, that is, working as intended.
Verification procedures may include such activities as review of HACCP
plans, CCP records, critical limits and microbial sampling and analysis.
FSIS is requiring that the HACCP plan include verification tasks to be
performed by plant personnel. Verification tasks would also be performed
by FSIS inspectors. Both FSIS and industry will undertake microbial
testing as one of several verification activities.
- Verification also includes 'validation' – the process of finding
evidence for the accuracy of the HACCP system (e.g. scientific evidence
for critical limitations).
- Establish record keeping procedures
- The HACCP regulation requires that all plants maintain certain
documents, including its hazard analysis and written HACCP plan, and
records documenting the monitoring of critical control points, critical
limits, verification activities, and the handling of processing
deviations. Implementation involves monitoring, verifying, and
validating of the daily work that is compliant with regulatory
requirements in all stages all the time. The differences among those
three types of work are given by Saskatchewan Agriculture and Food.[8]
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