Title: H A C C P
1H A C C P
Inneke Hantoro
2Introduction Traditional QC vs Preventive System
- Traditional QC programs spot-checked
manufacturing conditions, and randomly sampled
and tested final products to ensure safe food. - If the finished product met the specifications,
it was approved otherwise, the product was held,
reprocessed, or destroyed.
Reactive inefficient
3Introduction Traditional QC vs Preventive System
- An HACCP program is about preventive systems to
eliminate a problem before it happens. - The actions that these systems provoke are
essentially preclusive they are designed to
prevent problems rather than solve them after
they have occurred. - QC checks occur during the process so that a
finished product is deemed consistently safe.
4Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP)
- The HACCP system has grown to become the
universally accepted method for food safety
assurance. - A major focus of the HACCP program is from farm
to table. ? HACCP is a concept as well as a
method of operation, applied to all phases of
food production, including agricultural
production, food handling, food processing, food
services, food distribution, and consumer use.
Everyone is responsible for safe food products
5Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP)
- The Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point
(HACCP) system is a science-based system created
to identify specific hazards and actions to
control them in order to ensure food safety and
quality. - A hazard is a biological, chemical or physical
agent in, or condition of, food with the
potential to cause an adverse health effect
(Codex Alimentarius, 1997).
6The need for an effective food safety assurance
method
- Foodborne disease are a widespread public health
problem. - Emergence of foodborne disease.
- Increased knowledge and awareness of the serious
and chronic health effects. - New food technologies and processing methods.
- Increased awareness of the economic consequences
of foodborne disease.
7The need for an effective food safety assurance
method
- Increase in the number of vulnerable people.
- Industrialization and mass production.
- Urbanization and changing lifestyle.
- Increase tourism and international trade in
foodstuffs. - Increase consumer awareness of food safety.
8Food Safety Assurance
- Good Manufacturing practices (GM)
- and
- Good Hygiene Practices (GHP)
- necessary
- But not always sufficient
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10The History of HACCP
- The HACCP concept was developed in the early
1970s as a system to assure food safety - 1983 WHO Europe recommends HACCP
- 1991 Codex HACCP draft
- 1998 FAO/WHO provide guidance for regulatory
assessment of HACCP - 2006 Increased worldwide use of HACCP in food
safety legislation
11Stake holders involved in HACCP
12The objectives HACCP application
- Focuses on identifying and preventing hazards
from contaminating food, based on sound science. - Permits more efficient and effective government
oversight, primarily because record keeping
allows investigators to see how well a firm is
complying with food safety laws over a period,
rather than how well it is doing on any given
day. - Places responsibility for ensuring food safety on
the food manufacturer or distributor. - Helps food companies to compete more effectively
in the world market. - Reduces barriers to international trade.
13HACCP Concept
- Identifying potential food safety problems
- Determining how and where these hazards can be
controlled or prevented - Describing what to do and training the personnel
- Implementation and recording
14HACCP Program Prerequisites
- Traceability and recall
- Pest control
- QA procedures
- SOP and SSOP
- Glass control
- Procedures for receiving, storage and shipping
- Labeling
- Employee food and ingredient handling
- Facilities
- Supplier control
- Specifications for all ingredients, products and
packaging materials - Production equipment
- Cleaning and sanitation
- Personal hygiene
- Training
- Chemical control
- Receiving, storage, shipping
GMP
15Preliminary Tasks of HACCP Program
- Choosing the HACCP team
- Description of the food product and its
distribution - Description of the intended use and consumer of
the product - Development of a flow diagram describing a food
product manufacturing process - Verification of the flow diagram
16The principles of HACCP
- 1. Conduct a hazard analysis
- 2. Determine the CCPs
- 3. Establish critical limit(s)
- 4. Establish a monitoring system
- 5. Establish corrective actions
- 6. Establish verification procedures
- 7. Establish documentation
- Source CODEX
171. Hazard Analysis
- The process of collecting and evaluating
information on hazards and conditions leading to
their presence to decide which are significant
for food safety and should be addressed in the
HACCP plan.
18Information needed for hazard analysis
- the agents that could be present in the food
under study - the severity of the effects and the likelihood of
their occurrence - the levels that could cause adverse health
effects - the conditions that could lead to unacceptable
levels
19Areas to consider in Hazard Analysis
- Raw materials and ingredients
- Product formulation
- Processing conditions
- Packaging
- Storage and distribution
- Preparation and use
- Target groups
20Probability - Severity
Probabilitas Severity/ Keparahan/Keakutan Severity/ Keparahan/Keakutan Severity/ Keparahan/Keakutan Severity/ Keparahan/Keakutan
Probabilitas Kritikal Serius Mayor Minor
Probabilitas Signifikan Signifikan Signifikan Tidak Signifikan
Probabilitas Signifikan Signifikan Tidak Signifikan Tidak Signifikan
Probabilitas Signifikan Tidak Signifikan Tidak Signifikan Tidak Signifikan
NACMCF
21Probability - Severity
- Probabilitas
- Tinggi mungkin terjadi
- Medium dapat tejadi
- Rendah tidak mungkin terjadi
- Keparahan/Keakutan
- Kritikal akan otomatis mengakibatkan makanan
tidak aman - Serius kemungkinan mengakibatkan makanan tidak
aman - Mayor dapat mengakibatkan makanan tidak aman
- Minor kemungkinan tidak mengakibatkan makanan
tidak aman
22Hazard Determination
232. Determination of CCPs
- Critical control point decision tree
- Questions to be asked for each raw material used
24 Questions to be asked for each process step
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263. The establishment of critical limits
- A criterion which separates acceptability from
unacceptability - Critical limits can be
- Values of pH, aw, temperature, time
- Absorbed radiation dose
- Levels of disinfectant or antimicrobial agents
- Level of cleanliness
- Limits of residues
- Limits of contaminants
- Limits of microbiological criteria
27- When is deviation from normality unacceptable?
- ( i.e. establishment of Critical Limits )
284 5. Monitoring and Corrective Action
- The key document
- Holding all the essential details about the
steps or stages - in the process where there are CCPs
- The HACCP Control Chart
29- Control measure
- Any factor or activity which can be used to
prevent, eliminate, or reduce food safety hazards
to an acceptable level - Critical limit
- The safety boundaries (criteria that separate
safe from unsafe) - Sources of information literature, regulation,
experiment, etc - Contain safety buffer zone
30- Monitoring
- Observation or measurement to ensure that the
process is operating within the critical limit - Based on some form of inspection and testing
- The frequency depends on the nature of the CCP
and the type of monitoring procedure - Clarify to all personnel involve (what to do and
how to do it)
31- Corrective action
- The action should be taken when the result shows
a deviation from the critical limit - Adjust the process to bring it back under control
- Deal with the material produced under the
deviation period - Hold on the product
- Rework
- Release product after sampling and testing
- Direct into less sensitive products, e.g. animal
feed - Clarify to all personnel involve (what to do and
how to do it)
326. Verification
- The application of methods, procedures, tests,
and other evaluations, in addition to monitoring,
to determine conformity with the HACCP plan. - This is primarily the responsibility of the
industry, however some verification activities
can be undertaken during regulatory assessments - Conformity
- Activities are carried out according to the
established procedures - e.g. the HACCP plan and prerequisites
337. Establishment of the record - keeping
procedures
- An HACCP program should be thoroughly documented
and implemented establishing procedures for the
identification, storage, retrieval maintenance,
protection, and disposition of documents. - The documentation generated must be formal
written records providing factual evidence that
an activity has been performed in a timely manner
in accordance with established procedures. - Information contained in corrective action
records provides a description of the deviation
and an evaluation of the corrective action taken,
as well as a notation as to final disposition of
the affected product. - The name of the individual responsible for taking
the corrective action should be included.
34Example of documentation about HACCP system
deviation report
35Example of documentation about corrective action
report
36References
- Arvanitoyannis, I.S. 2009. HACCP and ISO 22000
Application to Foods of Animal Origin. Blackwell
Publishing Ltd. - Vasconcellos, J. A. 2004. Quality Assurance for
the Food Industry A Practical Approach. CRC
Press, Boca Raton. - van Schothorst, M. 2004. A simple guide to
understanding and applying the hazard analysis
critical control point concept 3rd Ed. Belgium.
ILSI Europe.