Good Hygienic Practices
Food can be contaminated at many stages
during a production process. There is a global trend in the food industry
towards minimal food processing and preservation. Consumer demand for
“fresh-like” additive-free foods, that maintain their nutritional and sensorial
properties during preparation, conservation, packaging, storage and finally
consumption, is on the rise. But the general tendency to apply mild processing
and conservation techniques to achieve that purpose, often shortens the
shelf-life of food, may put foods at risk and may compromise consumer health.
Therefore, more than ever, good hygienic engineering and design practice is one
of the tools to reduce or exclude microbial (e.g. pathogens), chemical (e.g.
lubricating fluids, cleaning chemicals) or physical (e.g. glass, wood)
contamination of food. Proper hygienic design also may eliminate product
'held-up' within the process equipment where it could deteriorate and affect
product quality on rejoining the main product flow. As such, good hygienic
design may prevent that one batch cross-contaminates a subsequent batch. Good
hygienic design further reduces the downtime required for an item of process
equipment to be cleaned, while at the same time allowing to increase the time
to produce. Therefore, although initially more expensive than similarly
performing poorly designed infrastructure and equipment where, hygienically
designed facilities and equipment will be more cost effective in the long term.
One GHP method to manage the risk of
contamination is to divide a food producing facility into zones in which different
hygiene levels apply and ensuring that products flow only from levels of basic
hygiene in direction of levels of higher hygiene.
Deciding upon how to apply these zones is
done by
- Identifying process steps where products or intermediate products are easily contaminated, for example because they are still unpacked.
- Deciding on how to demark or enclose those rooms/areas so that strict hygiene rules can be applied. This might require some reorganization of the flow of process.
- Deciding on rules that need to be applied in each defined zone.
The ideal production plant would be
designed in such a way that raw material would enter at one end of the building
and follow a linear path through zones of increasing hygiene before exiting as
a final product at the other end. This ideal situation would minimize
cross-contamination and should be applied to the design of new food plants. In
reality, businesses often have to make do with less than ideal buildings.
However, most processes can be (re)arranged
in order to comply as much as possible with the ideal flow of product through a
plant. In addition, identification of potential cross-contamination in the flow
of material and processes and taking actions to prevent contamination will
significantly enhance the level of product safety.
Not all production types require exactly 3
hygiene zones. In certain cases only 2 zones are required whereas in others
perhaps 4 might be more appropriate. What is important is to understand and
follow the principle of differentiating between process steps where
contamination is more likely to occur and defining the necessary design and
corresponding behaviour to prevent contamination from happening at these steps.
Zoning – A Cornerstone in
Prevention of Food Contamination
Zone B:
Zone B is an area in which
a basic level of hygienic design requirements suffices. It encompasses areas in
which products are produced that are not susceptible to contamination or that
are protected in their final packages. A B0 zone is the area outside the
buildings within the perimeter of the site where the objective is to control or
reduce hazards created by unauthorized personnel entry and hazards created by
water, dirt, dust and presence of animals. B1 zones include warehouses that
store both raw materials and packed processed products, offices, workshops,
power supply areas, canteens and redundant buildings/rooms. The objective for a
B1 zone is to control or reduce hazards created by birds and pests.
Zone M:
Zone M is an area in which a medium level of
hygiene suffices. It includes process areas where products are produced that
are susceptible to contamination, but where the consumer group is not especially
sensitive and where no further microbial growth is possible in the product in
the supply chain. In this area, product might be exposed to the environment,
during sampling and during the opening of equipment to clear blockages. The
objective for zone M is to control or reduce the creation of hazardous sources
that can affect an associated area of higher zone classification. Another
objective is the protection of the interior of food processing equipment from
contamination when exposed to the atmosphere.
Zone H:
Zone H applies to an area where the highest
level of hygiene is required. A “High Hygiene” room, which, in food processing
is the equivalent of a cleanroom, must be completely contained. Zone H is
typical for open processing, where even short exposure of product to the
atmosphere can result in a food safety hazard. Products and ingredients that
are processed or stored and are destined for a highly susceptible consumer
group (e.g., infant nutrition), are instant in nature or ready for consumption.
They must be handled in a refrigerated supply chain, as they are susceptible to
growth of pathogenic microorganisms. The objective for H zones is to control
all product contamination hazards and to protect the interior of food
processing equipment from exposure to atmosphere. Filtered air must be supplied
to this area.
These areas should be limited in size, must have a simple equipment layout to facilitate process, cleaning and maintenance operations and should have utilities located outside. However, investing in an enclosed line that brings barriers very close to the product is more logical than trying to create a complete cleanroom around a partially open line.
Zoning and the establishment of barriers to
ensure that product of acceptable hygienic quality is produced should only be
applied where their use will help significantly to protect products. Designing
the entire factory as a cleanroom is not the purpose of food area segregation
to protect both product and consumer. Zoning and barrier technology must be applied
in an appropriate and consistent way, thereby avoiding unnecessary investment.
Construction of Facilities: Appropriate Layout
Construction of Facilities: Appropriate Layout
The layout and design of the food factory
must be adapted to the hygienic requirements of a given process, packaging or
storage area. The interior of the factory must be designed so that the flow of
material, personnel, air and waste can proceed in the right direction. As they
become incorporated into food products, raw materials and ingredients should
move from the ‘dirty’ to the ‘clean’ areas. However, the flow of food waste and
discarded outer packaging materials should be in the opposite direction. Before
building begins, simulation of the flow of people, materials, products and
waste can help the designer determine the most appropriate place for installing
the process equipment and where the process and utility piping should enter the
process area. Even the simulation of maintenance and cleaning operations can be
useful to determine the most appropriate factory layout. Graphical
computer-aided design and 3D visualization programs can help in the hygienic
design, positioning and routing of processes, process supports and utility
systems. These programs allow the observer to “walk through” the facility,
seeing the inside of the facility from different angles and locations. To save
building and renovation costs, potential problems can be solved before the
onset of construction. Additionally, in the development of high hygiene areas,
computational fluid dynamics can help simulate and visualize expected air-flows.
To meet a possible increase of processing activities within the food plant in the future, the building and its food processing support systems should be designed so they can either be expanded, or another building and/or utilities can be added. Over-sizing the main utility systems is a common practice. If possible, the factory should also be made adaptable (i.e., the ability to modify the production area for other manufacturing purposes) and versatile (i.e., the ability to do different things within the same room).
Construction of Facilities:
Pest Prevention
To exclude flooding and the entry of
rodents, factories should be built at a higher level than the ground outside.
Exterior doors should not open directly into production areas, and windows
should be absent from food processing areas. The number of loading docks should
be minimal and be 1–1.2 m above ground level. Preferably, outside docks should
have an overhanging lip, with smooth and uncluttered surfaces that are sloped
slightly away from the building to encourage water run-off. Areas beneath docks
should not provide harborages for pests, should be paved and should drain
adequately. To provide protection for products and raw materials, docks can be
shielded from the elements by roofs or canopies. However, these structures can
become a serious sanitation problem due to roosting or nesting of birds. Bird
spikes or nets can solve that problem. To prevent the entry of insects, dock
openings should be provided with plastic strips or air curtains, and external
lighting to illuminate these factory entrances should be placed in locations
away from the factory building. Intruding insects can still be attracted and
killed within the food factory by strategically positioned ultraviolet (UV)
light electric grids or adhesive glue board traps.
Construction of Facilities:
Interior Hygienic Design and Construction Materials
Construction materials for equipment and
utility piping should be hygienic (smooth, non-absorbent, non-toxic and easily
cleanable), chemical-resistant (to product, process chemicals, cleaning and
sanitizing agents), physically durable (unbreakable, resistant to steam,
moisture, cold, abrasion and chipping) and easy to maintain. Materials used to
construct process and utility systems located in the non-food contact area may
be of a lower grade than those applied in the food contact zone. Surfaces that
are frequently wet should not be painted as the paint can crack, flake and
chip.
Lead, mercury and cadmium should not be
used within the factory. However, as part of many electric components, it is
very difficult to exclude their presence. In the food contact area, electric
components must always be enclosed in junction boxes, casings, closed cable
housings, cabinets, etc. or should be installed in non-product contact zones or
in technical corridors. Alloys for food contact may only contain aluminum,
chromium, copper, gold, iron, molybdenum, nickel, platinum, silver, titanium,
zinc, carbon, etc. However, zinc, copper, aluminum, bronze, brass, carbon and
galvanized and painted steel have poor resistance to detergents, disinfectants,
acidic food and steam and must be avoided in food contact areas.
Polytetrafluoroethylene, polyethersulfone,
polyvinylidene fluoride, phenol-formaldehyde, urea-formaldehyde,
melamine-formaldehyde, epoxy and unsaturated polyester resins are used in the
construction of electric components, while other plastics like polypropylene
(PP), low-density polyethylene (PE), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), polyurethane
(PU), ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM), silicone, etc. are applied as
jacket materials for electrical cables or for the construction of pneumatic
hoses and compressed air tubing. PP, PE and PVC are also used to construct
drain pipes, while shields of polycarbonate can protect the food area below
light sources from shattered glass after accidental breakage of lamps.
Silicone, nitrile, PU, EPDM and butyl rubber are largely used as materials for
gaskets, seals, etc. Epoxy is widely used as floor, wall and ceiling coatings.
Remember that many plastics perform differently at -25 °C than they do at 20
°C.
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