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Seven Principles for Enhanced Food Safety
Whether their goal is to boost their reputation, improve operational efficiency, ensure the safety of their products, or achieve compliance with one of many national or global regulative systems in the food industry, food businesses are often highly motivated to adjust their processes to HACCP standards and become HACCP-certified. As a comprehensive system of well-established guidelines, HACCP provides a framework for many other systems and as such touches on all aspects of the food supply chain. Thanks to such a wide reach, the fact that HACCP is not mandatory does not make it any less essential for effective food safety management for any organisation in the industry.
Briefly put, HACCP, or Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point, is a systematic approach to food safety focused on elimination or prevention of food safety hazards at the level of individual products and processes. In addition to the identification of potential hazards, it also involves the identification of control points (CPs) and their classification as critical control points (CCPs) if further analysis shows them as such. All this is done with the goal of maintaining control over critical steps in each operational process and implementing corrective measures in a timely manner.
Curious about the basics of HACCP? Check out this article for more elemental details.
The Seven Principles of HACCP
HACCP is based on seven clearly defined principles that are universal for the entire food industry. They must be integrated into every HACCP plan, regardless of the nature of any specific business. Adherence to those principles is thoroughly checked during both internal and external HACCP audits.
While adhering to HACCP principles is mandatory for obtaining the certificate, the approach to each principle is up to the organisation. The reason for this lies in the very nature of HACCP. Since the focus of HACCP is on particular steps of individual processes which vary from company to company, each company develops, implements, and maintains its HACCP plan in accordance with its unique needs.
This poses numerous practical challenges, from on-site analysis to monitoring and corrective actions to reliable reporting and documentation. Let's explore how HACCP principles work in practice and how smart auditing solutions can make their application more streamlined.
Overcoming Practical Challenges
Erlenweg 6 | 6312 Steinhausen
Schweiz | +41 41 850 85 67
[email protected]