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HACCP Program

The document discusses the HACCP system, which is a prevention-based food safety program that identifies and monitors hazards associated with food production. It outlines the seven principles of HACCP including identifying hazards, determining critical control points, establishing critical limits, monitoring procedures, corrective actions, verification procedures, and record-keeping.

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kabutiko24
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
75 views

HACCP Program

The document discusses the HACCP system, which is a prevention-based food safety program that identifies and monitors hazards associated with food production. It outlines the seven principles of HACCP including identifying hazards, determining critical control points, establishing critical limits, monitoring procedures, corrective actions, verification procedures, and record-keeping.

Uploaded by

kabutiko24
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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HACCP

System –
The Principles

7
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
1
 New challenges to food safety include:
 Emerging pathogens that cause foodborne
illness
 The changing nature of the food
supply
 New techniques for processing and
serving food
 The changing eating habits of consumers
 The increased number of people who are at
risk of experiencing foodborne illness

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


2
 Controlling time and temperature
 Practicing good hygiene

 Preventing cross contamination

 Cleaning and sanitizing properly

 Obtaining food from approved sources

264 - 266
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
3
 Hazard
 Analysis
 Critical
 Control
 Point
 The HACCP system is a
prevention-based safety
program that identifies and
monitors hazards associated
with food production.
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
4
 Identify all ingredients in a food or product
 Identify PHF (TCS) ingredients and foods
 Helps to focus best food handling
practices on high risk products
 Prepare a food flow diagram
 Identify all the storage and
preparation steps involved in
making and serving food.
 Used to identify the critical steps
to be addressed in a formal
HACCP plan
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
5
 Standard Operation Procedures (SOPs) that
assure uniform food safety compliance
 Use of approved products
 Facility design that meets code requirements
 Employees educated and supervised in good
personal hygiene practices
 An effective cleaning and sanitation program
 Proper equipment and maintenance programs
 A commitment from management to facilitate the
HACCP system
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
6
 In a HACCP system
the focus is on food
and how it is handled
during:
 Purchasing
 Receiving
 Storage
 Preparation
 Display
 Service

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


7
 HACCP system is designed to anticipate and control
problems before they happen
 Additional benefits:
 Enables food managers to identify the foods and
processes that are more likely to cause foodborne
illnesses
 More accurately describes the overall condition of the
establishment
 The first priority of HACCP system is to ensure the safety
of the potentially hazardous foods on the menu
 HACCP MUST be Developed, Implemented and
Maintained
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
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Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
9
 Identify hazards
associated with:
 Ingredients that are
received
 Each step in the flow of
food
 The time of purchase or
consumption by the
customer
Hazards can come from anywhere and foods may
enter your establishment already contaminated!

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


10
 Risk is the probability that a condition or
conditions will lead to a hazard.
 Risk is influenced by such things as:
 Type of customers
 Type of foods served
 Characteristics of organisms
 Past outbreaks
 Type of food production and
number of meals served
 Extent of worker training

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


11
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
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 Preventative measures can
include:
 Controlling the temperature of
foods
 Controlling the time foods are
held in the temperature danger
zone
 Controlling cross contamination
 Practicing good personal
hygiene
 Practicing proper handwashing
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
13
 Most commonly used critical control points:
 Cooking
 Cooling
 Reheating
 Hot-holding
 Cold-holding

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


14
Cooking Cold-holding Cooling

Reheating Hot-holding
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
15
 CCP is a point at which a hazard might develop
 Should emphasize on the:
 Cooking, cooling, reheating, hot/cold holding
are CCP
 SOPs:
 Importance of good personal hygiene
 Avoidance of cross-contamination
 Environmental hygiene practices
 Creating a flowchart of preparation steps

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


16
 Standard Operating Procedures
(SOPs) complement the HACCP
system and include:
 Employee hygiene practices
 Cross contamination prevention
 Cleaning and sanitizing practices
 Pest control

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


17
 Critical limits (CLs):
 Are the upper and lower
boundaries for food safety
 Should be set for each critical
control point
 Are set to ensure each critical
control point effectively prevents,
eliminates, or controls a hazard
 Should be easy to measure and
monitor

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


18
 CL = to ensure each CCPs manage to control the hazards
 CL = based on time, temperature, pH or moisture content of
a food.
 Identify at each step the procedures to:
 Prevent
 Reduce and
 Eliminate recontamination hazards
 Examples:
 Ground meat MUST be heated at ≥68˚C at least 15
seconds
 Time and temperature is vital

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


19
 Monitoring is making observations and
measurements to determine whether a
CCP is under control.
 Use flowchart to follow PHFs through the
entire process to compare your
operation’s performance against your
requirements.
 Verify temperatures during receiving,
storing, preparation, and cooling.
 Verify storage procedures Temperature log

 Are thermometers correctly calibrated?

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


20
Step 3:
Step 1:
Apply corrective
Determine what went action to a new
wrong. system.

Step 2: Step 4:
Choose appropriate Record corrective
corrective action. action steps taken.

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


21
 May be as simple as rejecting a shipment or
ingredient
 May require adjusting calibration of measuring
device
 May necessitate shutting down an operation

 May need to be more explicit in your instructions


- for example, prepare in small batches
 Make corrections to your flowchart

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


22
The verification process consists of two phases:
 Phase 1:
 Verify established critical limits for CCPs will:
 Prevent a hazard
 Eliminate a hazard
 Reduce a hazard to acceptable levels
 Phase 2:
 Verify the overall HACCP plan is working
effectively
 Frequently review food flow plans and records

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


23
 The HACCP plan should include information about:
 Hazards associated with each CCP and preventative measures
 Food preparation steps with CCPs
noted
 Critical limit identification
 Monitoring procedures and systems
 Corrective action plans
 Effective record keeping system to:
 demonstrate establishment of system
 document its utilization
 verify efficacy
 Examples: Flowcharts, Written logs
 HACCP system provides for continual change and improvement
Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)
24
 (GAPs) Good Agricultural Practices (on-farm)
 (GMPs) Good Manufacturing Practices
(processing and manufacturing)
 (GRPs) Good Retail Practices (retail).

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


25
 Used in retail food preparation and distribution
 GRPs focus on food safety practices for retail
food distribution, preparation, display and sale
 GRP guidelines are written for:

• Receiving • Personal health and


• Storage hygiene
• Preparation • Employee and
• Packaging and labeling customer education
• Display • Record keeping

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


26
 Use product coding to track:
 Stock rotation
 Shelf life

 Product coding is designed


and customized for the
operation.

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


27
 Removal of food products from retail food
establishments and from the food distribution
chain
 May be for food safety or food quality reasons
 Class 1, 2, or 3 based on the severity of the risk
a product may present
 Important to have a good process in place for
food recalls.

Lovelyna Jipiu (2018)


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