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| 0107 PD: Implementing health management protocols |
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| Archives - Past Articles | |||
| Wednesday, 10 January 2007 08:27 | |||
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The current trend in animal agricultural food production is to look at “process control” rather than “product control.” Process control can be defined as how the food is produced, whereas product control means how the product turns out. Consumers, in general, have great confidence in the quality of agricultural food products, but they are becoming more aware of agricultural production practices. This awareness has led to increased concern over how their food is produced. Dairy producers that have implemented written health protocols will be on the leading edge of assuring consumers their food is being produced in a manner in which they can abide. Some examples of programs that emphasize process control include the Milk and Dairy Beef Quality Assurance Program, the Pork Quality Assurance Program and HACCP (Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points) programs used in the poultry industry. HACCP is a system created in the late 1950s by the Pillsbury Company as they prepared to provide food for space flights. They recognized contamination of space-bound food was an unacceptable hazard. The thought of an astronaut with a case of salmonellosis while stuck in a space suit for three days was a hazard they wanted to avoid. End product testing (product control) did not provide enough certainty that the food sent into space was absolutely free of hazards. So Pillsbury settled on developing a system of describing the processes used to produce a food and then, through scrutiny of every step in that process, came up with the points and practices by which introduction of a hazard could be prevented. Today, HACCP has been adopted by food manufacturers and has become the basis for USDA’s Food Safety Inspection Service (FSIS), resulting in a 50 percent reduction in salmonella in processed poultry and 30 percent reduction of E coli. HACCP principles are used to develop a framework to manage the points in the process to prevent “hazards.” There are seven steps for implementing a modified HACCP program, including: 1. defining the goal for the operation 2. describing the activity or operation (diagrams or flow charts) 3. identifying the potential hazards 4. describing preventive measures 5. establishing critical limits (benchmarks) 6. establishing monitoring procedures 7. determining corrective actions Measuring, monitoring and recording are essential to this process. Process control concepts can be useful for any management system on a dairy including employee management, waste management, animal health, nutrition programs, reproductive procedures, biosecurity or virtually any other aspect. Many farms have struggled with implementing health monitoring protocols. They get enthused for a short time, then the program fades away or other priorities arise.
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