HACCP Issues and Impacts
HACCP Issues and Impacts
HACCP Issues and Impacts
Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) was originally developed based on
several key program types. The templates were created for specific industries and food
risks and therefore do not fully address HACCP-level requirements of all food-level risks
in the marketplace. For example:
• The U.S. Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service (USDA-
FSIS), International HACCP Alliance and the National Environmental Health
Association focus on meats, protein and dairy.
Much of the development of HACCP programs is based on training for these segments.
Ultimately, foods or industry segments requiring HACCP have followed these
established models, even though they do not always align with food risks or operational
models. As a result, HACCP plan coordinators outside these risk categories [e.g., food
contact packaging, contract food packaging, food ingredients, pet food, service providers
(e.g., transport, warehouse, logistics, uniforms)] have been challenged to make
determinations with limited comparable references.
Unfortunately, facilities like these are often left with ineffective HACCP programs that
are deficient in managing operational risks unique to the company’s product or
processing environment. These may include a lack of risk assessments, minimal
preventive controls and validations or not being scalable to the changing requirements
of the market [i.e., Global Food Safety Initiative (GFSI) continuous improvement,
science-based findings of risks, Food Safety Modernization Act’s (FSMA) Hazard
Analysis and Risk-Based Preventive Controls].
Effective and workable approaches to mitigating the above issues should consider
designing and customizing HACCP training to include product and unique process flow.
To best accomplish this, several issues must be addressed, including the following:
• Training needs to be more open to specific and unique industry and operational
needs. It further needs to be “fit for the use” of the related product and process food
safety risk. For example, in packaging with high engineering of product, training needs
to focus on the ultimate process design and capability developed and maintained by
process engineers.
• Content registers must be developed to provide elements and direction for HACCP
program design, development and implementation. HACCP teams should work under
the direction of a competent and advanced HACCP-trained coordinator to design and
establish the content register during development and implementation, in addition to
using the established five-step approach and seven HACCP principles per Codex
Alimentarius. The content register should address risks and control measures that are
unique to operations, finished product and services that impact food safety (e.g., pest
control, service contractors, trainings, comanufacturers).
• The HACCP development process needs to be open and channel aspects of the program
to the risks associated with nontraditional HACCP food applications (see “New HACCP
Applications,”) or service operations.
• Food ingredients, including dry, mill, liquid, whole grains, snack foods, etc.
• Food contact packaging (i.e., flexible films, lids, paper, converters, rigid plastic,
glass, metal), including source and validation of inks and dyes (domestic or imported),
compressed air quality, type of lubricants (food-grade versus non-food-grade, soy- or
mineral oil-based), physical and chemical properties with reference to ink, migration
and permeability, compatibility and reaction of adhesives/inks under various handling
conditions by consumers such as heat and cold. These could be mitigated through
documented material and ingredient vendor/supplier validation studies or in-house
finished product shelf-life studies.
• Reviewing and assessing available human and financial resources with accountability
for deliverables
• Aligning definitions for likelihood and severity factors with identified potential and
operational risks from biological, physical, chemical, allergen and radiological
perspectives
• Further aligning FSMA preventive controls and incorporating them into the various
food operational and risk categories
Supporting Information
When developing HACCP plans and strategies, identifying industry, academic, category,
customer, supplier and established global information can help support plan design,
including Hazard Analysis, preventive controls and risk rating/ranking. This
information can be obtained through research and communication updates relevant to
the food risks of the product or product type being addressed. Some reliable sources
include the following:
• Industry publications
• Product and raw material technical information and food intended-use validation
• Dialogue with customers and suppliers related to their determination of risk analysis
for the food-grade product provided
Value-Added Activities
Developing and implementing HACCP programs require a significant investment of
time and effort. Although HACCP continues to evolve, it is up to the individual company
to design and customize HACCP programs to make them effective and workable,
particularly in foods and industry segments outside HACCP’s “standard” risk categories.
There are a number of operational considerations that can help ensure a compliant and
value-added HACCP program:
• Appoint a food safety team with extensive process and product experience, including
R&D, product engineering, process engineering and maintenance
• Conduct effective and customized HACCP team training by a certified lead HACCP
trainer with extensive and varied product process experience, including contact
packaging, milling, snack foods, etc.
• Conduct in-depth risk assessment and implement mitigation strategies for critical
equipment
• Include and establish critical equipment during the process Hazard Analysis risk
assessment and development
• Develop a robust in-house training program for CCPs and operational prerequisite
monitors and verifiers
Regina Tihfon, M.Sc., is a senior consultant at Kestrel Management with 25 years of experience
in food safety and quality assurance. She trains management and operators in food safety,
HACCP and conformance to specifications and ISO 9001. Regina has an M.Sc. in food science
and technology from Texas Tech University and an Ordinary National Diploma in Food
Technology from Birmingham College of Food (England).
Categories: Management: Risk Assessment; Process Control: Best
Practices; Regulatory: Audits/Certification/GFSI, FDA, FSMA,HACCP, USDA