Term
What, in general, did HACCP do? |
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Definition
-created hazard analysis & cricital control points |
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Term
What are the advantages of HACCP as listed by the FDA? |
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Definition
-focuses on identifying and preventing hazards from contaminating food -is based on sound science -results in more efficient & effective oversight -places responsibility for ensuring food safety on the food manufacturer or distributor -helps food companies compete more ffectively in the worl market -reduces barriers to international trade |
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Term
What are the 7 steps of HACCP? |
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Definition
1) analyze potential hazards 2) identify critical control points 3) establish preventive measures w/ critical limits for each control point 4) establish procedures to monitor CCPs 5) establish corrective actions to be taken when a critical limit has not been met 6) establish recordkeeping to document HACCP system 7) establish procedures to verify system is working properly |
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Term
What is the most important step of HACCP? |
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Definition
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Term
What are some of the factors on which HACCP hazard analysis is contingent? |
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Definition
-input quality, quantity, source, etc -intended use and consumer -processes & equipment used |
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Term
What are some specific examples of critical control points? |
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Definition
-cooking, chilling, washing of equipment, standards for facilities (handwashes), standards for employees (hairnets, clothing) |
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Term
What are critical limits? Examples? |
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Definition
-direct, objective limits for critical control points -time, temp, pressure, etc |
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Term
What are the general guidelines for corrective actions? |
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Definition
-determine cause of failure & correct -remediation measures should be pre-determined when possible -protect products yet to enter the system -recover products potentially harmed by failure |
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Term
What needs to be involved in record keeping? |
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Definition
-EVERYTHING -records of original plan, all modifications, monitoring procedures, results, all failures, corrective actions, subsequent monitoring, verification process |
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Term
When do we verify that the system is working? |
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Definition
-routinely/ randomly -when emerging concerns are identified -when system failure has occurred: disease outbreak |
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Term
What are the initial, secondary, and tertiary verification stages? |
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Definition
-initial: prior to implementation -secondary: after implementation -tertiary: re-evaluation |
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Term
For HASA, what are the two levels of government verification? |
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Definition
-01: focuses on 1 discrete aspect -02: focuses on entire procedure related to certain product lot |
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Term
In which ways does the government still maintain oversight? |
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Definition
-continuous inspection -HACCP verification -testing standards |
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Term
What do we test for microbially? |
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Definition
-generic E. coli to assess possible fecal contamination -listeria testing by plant personnel for secondary processing -Salmonella culture by FSIS to assess plant compliance -E. coli O157:H7 testing yb FSIS to assess product adulteration, requires immediate action |
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Term
What are the pre-processing interventions used by primary plants? |
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Definition
-wash animals, feed additives, vaccinations |
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Term
What are the pre-processing interventions used by secondary plants? |
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Definition
-to prevent raw material contaminaiton: HACCP plans of suppliers, microbial testing of product, kill step |
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Term
What are the post-harvest interventions? |
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Definition
-irradiation, organic acid or steam sprays, cooking, processing |
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Term
What are some of the other threats on the farm that HACCP is concerned about? Who is responsible? |
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Definition
-residues, physical hazards, infectious diseases -producer and vet |
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