Hi Evelyn,

Welcome to the IFSQN forums
This question 4 is related to INTERNATIONAL ISO STANDARD 22000 2018 Food safety management systems — Requirements for any organization in the food chain – Section 8.5.2.4 Selection and categorization of control measure(s)
8.5.2.4.1 Based on the hazard assessment, the organization shall select an appropriate control measure or combination of control measures that will be capable of preventing or reducing the identified significant food safety hazards to defined acceptable levels.
The organization shall categorize the selected identified control measure(s) to be managed as OPRP(s) (see 3.30) or at CCPs (see 3.11).
The categorization shall be carried out using a systematic approach. For each of the control measures selected, there shall be an assessment of the following:
a) the likelihood of failure of its functioning;
b) the severity of the consequence in the case of failure of its functioning; this assessment shall include:
1) the effect on identified significant food safety hazards;
2) the location in relation to other control measure(s);
3) whether it is specifically established and applied to reduce the hazards to an acceptable level;
4) whether it is a single measure or is part of combination of control measure(s).
It would appear that the Question 4 in the guidance is not a clear Yes/No answer to all the bullet points and you should take a view on the likelihood of it being an OPRP or CCP based on the ISO 22000 8.5.2.4.1 criteria.
For example, last control measure controlling a hazard in the process is more likely to be a CCP. Also, whether it is a single measure or is part of combination of control measure(s), is not really a Yes/No answer in my view.
I would reword this question: Is the severity of the consequence in the case of failure of its functioning likely to mean this is a CCP?
No – OPRP
Yes – Go to question 5
The guidance document does state: The appendix to this document presents a decision tree (spread over two pages) that can be used to conduct a hazard analysis within the framework of ISO 22000. Potential users should be aware that this decision tree is a result of an interpretation and that other tools can be used.
Kind regards,
Tony