Sustainable improvement of animal health care by systematic quality risk management according to the HACCP concept

The Veterinary Quarterly
J P Noordhuizen, H J Welpelo

Abstract

This paper addresses the principles of the Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) concept as applied to animal health management strategy. Characteristics of the concept were analysed and compared with those of current animal health care strategies for disease risk identification and herd health management, insurance, and certification. HACCP is a hybrid strategy of quality control at both production process and product level. Animal health is considered a particular quality feature. We show that process control (expressed in terms of controlling both general and specific disease risk factors) and product control (expressed in terms of testing animals or animal products for specific disease agents) could form the basis for improving animal health. We conclude that HACCP provides ample opportunity for preventive health action and risk management at a relatively low cost in terms of labour, finance and documentation expenditure, at both the farm and sector level. Epidemiological field studies are currently needed to identify critical control points and to design HACCP procedures for livestock producers. In the long run, HACCP based animal health care can be further developed into a quality control systems approach to cove...Continue Reading

Citations

May 1, 1999·Preventive Veterinary Medicine·J P Noordhuizen, K Frankena
Nov 22, 2000·The Veterinary Quarterly·T A NiewoldJ van der Meulen
Jan 5, 2002·The Veterinary Quarterly·J P Noordhuizen, G H Wentink
Jan 1, 2009·Irish Veterinary Journal·Jptm Noordhuizen, J Cannas da Silva
Apr 12, 2006·The Veterinary Quarterly·J Cannas da SilvaW Baumgartner
May 7, 2015·Preventive Veterinary Medicine·Conor G McAloonMichael L Doherty
Jul 9, 2009·EFSA Journal·UNKNOWN European Food Safety Authority (EFSA)

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