Description: Allergens continue to play a significant role in causing human
illness and death. While labeling requirements established by the FDA
have been in effect for some time, recalled food in today’s marketplace
is very often the result if inaccurate allergen labeling that does not
declare allergenic ingredients.
Allergen cross contact and cross contamination can occur anywhere throughout the entire food supply chain.
Under the FDA’s FSMA preventive control rules, allergens get special
attention. They cannot be seen and are rarely tested for in spite of the
fact that allergens come from many sources and are often associated
with cross contact and cross contamination. Preventive control,
sanitation and transportation rule requirements are not yet in place to
adequately protect consumers from the potential deadly impact of
ingested allergens.
It is required that preventive control
plans include hazard analysis for allergen plans include incoming,
in-process and outgoing ingredients, packaging and labeling and cross
contact prevention is validated in the validation plan.
Why you should attend:
Under FDA’s FSMA rules, no company can afford to ignore the need to
prevent cross contact or cross contamination by allergens through any
food process. Biological, chemical and physical hazards have the
potential to spread through any process, any food handling operation or
any transportation process with the likely result that traceability of
the contaminant back to the source can become impossible. Under new
preventive control rules, cross contamination by allergens has earned a
special place in the training and food safety plan because of their
ability to contaminate equipment, people and other food products.
The need to understand what can happen and how to begin valid
preventive planning that takes cross contact and contact contamination
into account is critical to implementation of any food safety system.
Objective:
1.Understand basic allergens
2.Establish a potential hazard analyses throughout food processes (process flows)
3.Identify preventive control measures
4.Establish preventive controls
5.Set up allergen monitoring procedures
6.Develop procedures
7.Take corrective action
8.Document allergen cross contact and cross contamination plans and controls
Areas Covered in the Session :
1.Allergen controls under the preventive control rules
2.The difference between cross contamination and cross contact
3.Farms, processing, packing houses, processing lines, truck trailers and containers
4.Hazard analysis
5.Sanitation
6.Supplier qualification
7.Packaging and labeling
Who Will Benefit:
1.Upper and Mid-level personnel from all registered food operations
2.Food safety team members
3.Food quality personnel
4.Managers and supervisors in food operations
5.Sanitation specialists and teams
6.Food packing, processing, distribution and handling personnel
7.Incoming packaging personnel
8.Labeling personnel
9.Food ingredient suppliers
10.Legal team members focused on food safety
11.Food safety leads and implementation team members
12.Maintenance operations personnel (sanitation)
13.Food facility personnel
14.Recall specialists
15.US Food Importers and Exporters to the US
16.Food Safety internal and external auditors and audit team members
17.Distribution center operations personnel
18.Carrier and food transportation management
19.Food Buyers and Supply Chain Qualifiers
About Speaker:
Dr. John Ryan is a certified Preventive Controls Qualified Individual
(PQCI) specializing in food safety process control and food safety plan
validation. He holds a Ph.D. in research and statistical methods and
has extensive international manufacturing quality and operations
experience in large and small manufacturing operations. He is a retired
Hawaii State Department of Agriculture Quality Assurance Division
administrator. He currently operates two business divisions focused on
preventive control validation at http://www.RyanSystems.com and food
safety during transportation operations at
http://www.SanitaryColdChain.com. His latest book entitled “ Validating
Preventive Food Safety and Quality Controls: An Organizational Approach
to System Design and Implementation” is now available from Barnes &
Noble or Amazon.
Event URL: https://www.compliancetrainingpanel.com/Webinar/Topic?WB=FD00090