HACCP means Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point. It is
basically designed to control the food safety hazards at critical points within
the food business. To make a HACCP Plan first we have to identify the hazards
that must be avoided, reduced or removed.
There are seven basic principles of HACCP:
- · Analyze the hazard
- · Determine the critical control point
- · Establish the critical limits
- · Establish the monitoring procedure for Critical Control Point
- · Establish the corrective actions
- · Establish verification procedure
- · Establish documentation system
Analyze the
hazard:
There are basically 3 types
of hazards biological, physical and chemical hazard. Analyze the hazards and
identify any hazardous biological, chemical, or physical property in raw
materials and processing steps are involved which can make the final product
unsafe for human consumption.
Determine Critical
Control Point:
Critical Control point is a
step or procedure at which controls can be applied and a food safety hazard can
be prevented, eliminated or reduced to an acceptable level.
Establish
the critical limits:
It 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 the occurrence of the
identified food safety hazard.
Establish
the monitoring procedure for Critical Control Point:
Monitoring is very important for a HACCP system. Monitoring
is a planned sequence of observations or measurements to assess whether a
critical control point is under control and to produce an accurate record for
future use in verification.
Establish
the corrective actions:
Corrective action is an
action taken when the results shows any deviations occurred in the process or
in the monitoring system or the critical control point indicate any loss of
control.
Establish
verification procedure:
Verification is the evaluation process of the methods and
procedure, in addition to monitoring, to determine compliance with the HACCP
plan.
Maintaining proper HACCP records is an essential part of the
HACCP system. Accurate and complete HACCP records are helpful for racing the history of an ingredient,
in-process operations, or a finished product, when problem arise.
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