- Incidentmanagement. Whilethis termis usually reserved for incidents that
maylead to publicconsequences (such as product withdrawals and recalls),
withinthis context we willuse it to refer to mechanisms to address
situations wherenormalprocedures havefailed and the processin question
is `out of control'. - Audit. For our purposes, the definitionof an audit systemmaynowbe
expanded a bit. Whileaudits mayconcentrate on one or moreof the above
levels(e.g.lookat establishedcontrolmechanisms but neveropena pump
to assess basic hygienic design or the effectiveness of a standard
maintenance/sanitationprogramme),it is clearthat the definitionshould
coverall relevant aspects:a critical assessmentof all the abovelevels
againstall considerationsthat are relevantfor the fundamental purpose of
the system(as detailedat the beginningof this section). For most audits
carriedout today, this is much too widebut we will needboththe depth in
termsof levels and the breadth in terms ofall relevant considerations'for our current
auditing for hygiene improvement'purposes.
40.4 Purposes of an auditingsystem
For the designof an auditsystem, we maydistinguishfourmainpurposes:
- Compliance, verification. Fundamentallythis type of auditassessesan
entiremanagementsystemaccordingto the above-mentioned `basicdesign'
perspective: haveall prescribedelements beenput in placeand are they
beingoperatedaccording to the requirementsof the standard? For this
purposewe will needpre-agreed standards that are sufficientlyprecise and
detailedto allowclear yes/no(or gradedin termsof major/minor) scores
regardingcompliance. Auditors will haveto knowthe standard thoroughly
(but no more thanthat)and,because of the potentialconsequences for the
auditee of non-compliance, need to be seen as strictly impartial and
independent. Assumingthat the standardis relevantand sufficient(the
never-endingstreamof new standards seemsto indicatethat this remains a
challenge) and that the facility in question does not yet meet all
requirements, a complianceauditmay lead to improvement.That,however,
is not the mainpurpose of this typeof auditand improvement potentialis
anywaylimitedto whatis foreseenby the standarditself. - Effectiveness,capability to performto specifications,validation. Thistype
of audit normally builds on the compliance perspective, extending the
question whether everythingis in placeaccording to the standard to:doesit workas intended?'. The focusis shifted from
basicdesign' tocontrol'. An intimateknowledgeof
the standard' is no longersufficient,the auditor will
haveto be able to makean informed decision regardingthe effectivenessof
the control system, basedon quantitative historical information.Where
processcapabilityissuesare found,some indication of the rootcauseis
688 Handbookof hygiene controlin the foodindustry