Wednesday, April 22nd 2020, 7:05 am
Originally Posted On: https://www.tracegains.com/blog/haccp-and-harpc-key-differences-and-definitions
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that roughly 48 million people contract a foodborne illness every year, resulting in about 128,000 hospitalizations and 3,000 deaths. So, it’s easy to understand why food safety remains a major concern for those in the food industry, and why Congress passed the Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) in 2010. But how did we get here?
Before the Obama Administration, the food industry relied primarily on Good Manufacturing Practices (GMPs or CGMPs), which provided a basic framework for manufacturers dealing with food safety. But during the Cold War’s space race in the 1960s, it dawned on researchers that food must not only provide balanced nutrition, it also can’t create health issues along the way. The food simply needed to be safe.
This prompted NASA to enlist the help of Pillsbury Co., which began working on cube-sized foods for astronauts. To ensure proper procedures were in place, NASA mandated the use of Critical Control Points (CCPs) in its engineering but applying such concepts to the production of food was a novel concept. Nonetheless, Pillsbury and NASA required contractors to identify “critical failure areas” and eliminate them from the system, thus helping to create the first Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points (HACCP) program.
A few years later, food industry experts realized that “food safety” and “HACCP” weren’t necessarily synonymous. Rather, food safety could be better defined as an integrated system of HACCP programs plus GMPs, which are now usually called prerequisite programs (PRPs)—systems that have been incorporated into government regulations across the world, including Codex and ISO 22000.
Fast forward several more years to the passage of FSMA, legislation aimed at guaranteeing the safety of the U.S. food supply. FSMA shifted the focus of federal regulators from responding to contamination events to preventing them altogether — a more proactive approach compared to the historically reactive one. Of particular note is the Hazard Analysis and Risk-based Preventive Controls (HARPC) provision of FSMA, a HACCP alternative.
The design was meant to be similar to that of HACCP, but more comprehensive. So, what is HACCP?
While the U.S. Food and Drug Administration also mandates HACCP, its application specifically for juice, seafood, retail, and foodservice. Still, HACCP’s principles are prevalent across all segments of food production. They’re primarily concerned with raw materials, products, and processes, and often mandated by large brands to their suppliers, and the suppliers’ suppliers.
Drafting a HACCP plan is a necessity, and a best practice to identify and define risks that need monitoring.
HARPC requires that companies have written plans that identify hazards, list the steps needed to minimize or prevent those hazards, identify monitoring procedures and record the results, and specify what actions will be taken to correct should problems arise. The FDA evaluates these plans and verify proper implementation and ongoing adherence.
The main difference between HACCP and HARPC is that HACCP, as mentioned above, only applies to seafood and juice processors, whereas HARPC applies to almost all food-processing facilities with the exception of those covered by and in compliance with HACCP (and a few other significant exemptions).
Additionally, HARPC includes planning for potential terrorist acts and/or intentional adulteration, food fraud, and a comprehensive recall plan.
Ultimately, a validated HACCP plan is the best precursor to a successful HARPC plan but having an effective HARPC plan almost always ensures compliance with HACCP mandates.
A hazard analysis plan, whether HARPC or HACCP, remains a key component of every quality program and is critical in avoiding costly and dangerous downstream issues. The ultimate goal is to find food safety problems proactively we might not otherwise know are there.
We’ve put together a checklist to help companies better navigate their own hazard analysis plans. You can download it here.
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