Available : All Days | Presented By : John M. Ryan |
Category : Food & Beverage | Event Type : Recorded Webinar |
For group or any booking support, contact: cs@conferenceuniverse.com 1 (855) 718-3101 (US Toll Free)
The food industry is in dire need of expanding proven cross-contamination thinking and practices to a more comprehensive and preventive level.
This 1-hour session focuses on potential cross contamination points from farm harvest bins onto pallets and through load and unload operations and into truck trailers and shipping containers. A comprehensive, risk-reducing preventive approach is presented, along with a basic set of low-cost tools covering temperature monitoring, sanitation, environmental protection, traceability, sampling and testing, training, documentation, transporter certification, and insurance coverage.
Most information and training surrounding food cross contamination is focused primarily on bacteria in the kitchen and the need to separate utensils and work areas of one type of food from another. However, supply chain and food distribution flows provide much greater opportunities and dangers for cross contamination.
Cross-contamination in the kitchen represents the tip of the iceberg and often ignores allergens, pesticides, gluten, yeast, molds, and most other adulterants as food moves through distribution channels in shared loads, on dirty pallets, and in poorly sanitized trucks. A much more comprehensive approach that protects food from cross contamination and humans from illness and death is required.
The potential for cross-contamination begins at the producer and includes all containers used to move food through the supply chain. If chicken residue is left in a truck trailer and that trailer is not appropriately sanitized and tested prior to picking up a load of lettuce, the potential for salmonella to impact the health and lives of hundreds of people is high. Molds or yeast left over from one load can impact the next several loads.
With the FSMA’s rules on food safety for human and animal foods, risk reduction and preventive planning become key factors. Requirements for food safety include improved management practices covering all food handling and food processes from the field through delivery to consumers.
Dr. John Ryan is the president of RyanSystems.com and holds a Ph.D. in research and statistical methods. For more than 25 years, he has implemented quality control systems for international corporations in the United States and around the world. He has recently retired from his position as the administrator for the Hawaii State Department of Agriculture's Quality Assurance Division where he headed up Hawaii’s commodity inspection, food safety certification, and measurement standards service groups.
His latest books published include “Validating Preventive, Food Safety and Quality Controls”, “Guide to Food Safety During Transportation: Controls, Standards and Practices” and Food Fraud are now offered by Elsevier Press. Dr. Ryan’s company, RyanSystems.com trains and consults with companies needing to establish and maintain high-performance food safety and quality systems.
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