Archive for the ‘Temperature Monitoring’ Category

Temperature Monitoring

Monday, August 31st, 2009

 CASE STUDY - SAFE FOOD HANDLING & STORAGE

PREAMBLE

Responsible providers of food to the public are continually seeking to identify ways to improve their quality systems and ensure their food quality procedures are more robust, more effective and less time-consuming for staff to administer. Most people experienced with quality systems know they do not take time, they SAVE TIME! Data Acquisition Networks (DAN) has worked with a large number of quality food providers and been able to inexpensively assist them to achieve their objectives.

This report has been prepared by Data Acquisition Networks (DAN) using data from one such provider that believed they were achieving high quality standards but came to understand with the benefit of automated monitoring that improvements were required. Peter Davis is a Director of Data Acquisition Networks and has extensive food industry experience covering food manufacturing, hospitality and food service distribution and wholesaling. DAN is a data management company. In compiling this report DAN has relied upon authoritative sources that have been identified in the report as well as accepted food industry custom and practice. The report should be read against this background and input from recognised food experts should be taken rather than relying solely upon the conclusions drawn herein.

FOOD STORAGE

Food Standards Australia[1] requires businesses to prepare and sell food that is safe to eat. Food causes illness because there are high levels of food-poisoning bacteria and these poisons are called toxins. “A way of preventing or limiting bacteria from multiplying or producing toxins in food is to control the temperature of the food by either keeping it cold or very hot”. Food Standards Australia requires potentially hazardous foods to be kept at 5degC or colder and prescribes that it is “safe for food to be between 5degC and 60degC for a limited time only“. Health regulators and inspectors commonly refer to the range between 5degC and 60degC as the DANGER ZONE for perishable foods. Food Standards Australia defines potentially hazardous foods as foods that might contain food-poisoning bacteria and which will allow food-poisoning bacteria to multiply. Examples of potentially hazardous foods are listed as raw and cooked meat, smallgoods, dairy products, seafood, processed fruit and vegetables, cooked rice and pasta, foods containing eggs, beans and nuts and foods that contain these foods for example sandwiches and rolls. Many of these food types are also the foods that are inclusions in a balanced and nutritious diet.

Food Standards Australia also requires that potentially hazardous frozen foods are kept frozen when they are stored, displayed or transported. Whilst no specific temperature is specified for frozen food it must be kept frozen to remain safe. Temperature abuse of frozen food can also have a detrimental impact on eating quality. It is commonly accepted that -18degC is a safe temperature at which frozen food should be stored. It is also generally agreed that infrequent but consistent temperature abuse can have a detrimental impact on the shelf-life of food and with some foods temperature abuse can also affect its nutrient value.

Food Standards Australia prescribes food that has been temperature abused for a continuous period of greater than 4-hours should be discarded. The NSW Food Authority[2] recommends perishable foods should not be left in the danger zone for longer than 2-hours!

ANALYSIS OF SAMPLE DATA

In order to undertake an appropriate analysis of the sample data a 3-month period was selected at random and used. This period covers part of the warmer end to summer as well as a period during the early onset of autumn. In practice however outside air temperature is only one influence on food storage temperature.

During the 3-month period under review the DAN Safe Food Monitoring System sent 4,275 data block sets to the website. Each data block set provided an average, a maximum and a minimum temperature for the fridge and the freezer for the half-hour reporting period. The DAN Safe Food Monitoring System also provides alarms when specified control points are reached. In this case the control points were set at >-16.5degC for the freezer and >+5degC for the refrigerated storage area. During the 3-month period under review the DAN Safe Food Monitoring System notified 462 alarm conditions some of which were reset alarms.

On 86 separate occasions during the 3-month period the temperature of the freezer storage area was reported by the DAN Safe Food Monitoring System to have been at a temperature of greater than -16.5degC for more than 45 minutes. On 7 occasions the freezer food storage area was >-10degC for more than 20 minutes. On 547 separate occasions during the 3-month period the maximum temperature recorded during a single reporting period exceeded >-10degC. There was no single day during the 3-month period when, at some stage during the day, the maximum recorded temperature in the frozen food storage room did not peak at >-5degC and on February 1st the frozen food storage room recorded a maximum temperature reached during the day of +3.4degC. Given the incidence of temperature maximums >-5degC on many days it is probable frozen food product would have thawed only to be later re-frozen.

The refrigerated storage area during the 3-months under review was > 5degC for 10 minutes on 84 separate occasions. On 253 separate occasions the maximum temperature recorded for a reporting period was greater than +7degC with a maximum of +11.4degC recorded on February 16th which is well inside the danger zone for perishable product.  

It should be noted these are the maximum temperatures recorded in any reporting period and that food spoilage is a function of temperature and time. Having said that, any perishable food storage area that has a high frequency of reaching Danger Zone Temperatures has a heightened risk of bacteria growth.

It is important to note that a manual temperature monitoring protocol formerly used on this sample site had not previously indicated this extent of temperature problem. Manual readings have historically been taken by a staff member at prescribed times during the day when temperature abuse was less severe. There is absolutely no suggestion these times were selected for that reason but rather, that the times when temperatures were recorded in accordance with standard procedures, were times when there was less activity and less traffic around the storage areas. As a consequence of less activity, the doors to the storage areas were less frequently open.

Based upon the sample analysis contained herein it is clear that despite genuine efforts by staff to manually monitor temperature, frozen product is likely to have thawed and then re-frozen on 10 or 11 occasions during the 3-month period under review. This estimate is based upon those days where the continuance of high temperature over a larger number of reporting intervals and the maximum temperatures recorded would normally be expected to have resulted in some product thawing.

In the case of chilled product there were 7 occasions on which product arguably stayed high enough in the DANGER ZONE for long enough for concern to be raised. Only microbiological testing and a correlation with time & temperature abuse could fully conclude the outcome.

It is reasonable to conclude however that at best the frozen and chilled product stored over the period under review is sub-optimal and heightens the risk of foodborne illness amongst the consuming public. As a secondary but never-the-less important consideration, the eating quality of food is likely to have been compromised across some food types.

Manual recording regimes with data taken say twice daily never reveal the full extent of temperature abuse. Electronic automated systems such as the DAN Safe Food Monitoring System used for collection of this sample data facilitate the correlation of time and temperature abuse with microbial testing. On this basis informed decisions are able to be made as to shelf-life reduction, requirement for immediate usage and instruction to discard. Not only does automated electronic monitoring enable corrective action to be taken to ensure temperature is maintained but correlation of microbial contamination with time & temperature data can mean food is able to be retained when it might otherwise be discarded.

For some it can be difficult and even threatening to conduct automated monitoring of food storage under their control as it subjects a process and procedures to more routine and much closer examination, more reliable and closer scrutiny whereas for others, using data objectively is seen as a way to improve performance. It was the latter quality of thinking that DAN found in this outlet and they are to be commended for their commitment to quality and food safety.



[1] Food Safety: Temperature control of potentially hazardous foods. Guidance on the temperature control requirements of Standard 3.2.2 Food Safety Practices and General Requirements.[2] http://www.foodauthority.nsw.gov.au/consumers/keeping-food-safe/#How-can-I-make-sure-my-food-is-safe

PREMIUM OFFER - Temperature Monitoring

Monday, August 17th, 2009

 

 

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Temperature monitoring is critical in a variety of industrial applications and Data Acquisition Networks has the perfect web-based product to automate routine data collection and ensure permanent data storage as evidence of your due diligence. DAN systems also send immediate alarms when required.

During August & September all online enquiries that proceed to an order and installation will receive a complimentary Mini Non-Contact IR IP67 Thermometer valued at $40.

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Temperature monitoring

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

TEMPERATURE MONITORING

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10% DISCOUNT FOR ONLINE ENQUIRY

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Food in its various forms is highly perishable. Even food that is pasteurized deteriorates rapidly if left unrefrigerated. Food that is UHT treated becomes perishable once opened.Food that is temperature abused rapidly allows growth of micro organisms that can cause illness or death particularly when consumed by the very young, older or frail people.The best way to ensure food safety is to ensure foods are processed appropriately and then stored appropriately. Temperature monitoring such as that supplied by DAN enables storage temperatures to be reliably recorded.

 

 

Automated Temperature Monitoring

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

Many systems used to monitor temperatures require data retrieval. That is someone needs to go and either view the data or transfer the data via a cable to a PC. Some other older-generation systems require a ‘collection device’ to be ‘docked’ overnight with a PC or LAN in order for data to be transferred to a central repository.

Data Acquisition Networks has solved the problem and can provide a solution at a very affordable cost. 

DAN temperature monitoring systems collect data and send it via GPRS, 3-G or satellite to a website where it is available as a permanent record and can be viewed through password-login in much the same way as we all logon to our bank to view our latest transactions and balance. It’s as simple as that!

DAN temperature monitoring systems also send alarms to people you designate thereby ensuring that whenever a problem starts to develop you have someone thereto fix it.

Remote Temperature Monitoring

Thursday, July 30th, 2009

The challenge when an installation is remote to your own work location is to be certain in the knowledge everything is working as it should be. Storage temperatures are frequently the issue of concern.

 Data Acquisition Networks offers remote temperature monitoring that enables you to view data over the internet and to receive alarms when things start to go wrong enabling you to take early corrective action.

DAN temperature monitoring systems are also able to monitor other variables from almost any industrial probe so if you speak to DAN today about your remote temperature monitoring needs you may find you are able to monitor other critical parameters as well.

You can contact DAN on +612 8838 2358 or by email through sales@danmonitoring.com

For People Serious About Temperature Monitoring

Friday, July 17th, 2009

Companies genuinely serious about temperature monitoring need to do more than ask a staff member to record temperatures on a run-sheet several times a day.

Data Acquisition Networks (DAN) provides web based temperature monitoring that ensures records are reliable and that information is gathered routinely. DAN temperature monitoring equipment collects data 24/7 and sends the data to a website where it is stored and accessible through password entry in the same way we all access our banking details over the internet.

DAN temperature monitoring systems send alarms when temperature is approaching unacceptable levels thereby enabling corrective action to be taken. Many critical materials are held in temperature controlled environments where absolute reliability of monitored temperature is an absolute necessity. Data Acquisition Networks has the answer!

Contact Data Acquisition Networks
by email or if you prefer, Telephone +61 2 8838 2358

Temperature monitoring

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Storage temperatures are critical to a variety of items and temperature failure can cause loss of life.

Manual recording regimes never reveal the full extent of temperature abuse. Electronic automated systems such as the DAN Temperature Monitoring System facilitate the correlation of time and temperature abuse. Why don’t manual recording systems work? There are a variety of reasons.

  1. Sometimes operatives are simply too busy to record the data temperature at the designated time

  2. Sometimes untrained and/or unqualified people are innocently dishonest - ”It causes less fuss if I write down what the temperature should be rather than what it is and anyway, it’s only a ‘little bit’ over what it should be so what damage can that cause?”

But most importantly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Manual systems do not monitor temperature consistently every day, every hour, every minute! Temperature abuse occurs most often because doors are left open whilst operatives load and unload stock as they go about their busy days. Temperature monitoring that is automated enables trained professionals to make judgments about how much temperature abuse is too much!

Data Acquisition Networks provides temperature monitoring solutions that are inexpensive, reliable and continuous.

Contact Data Acquisition Networks
by email or if you prefer, Telephone +61 2 8838 2358

Temperature data loggers

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Food Standards Australia requires businesses to prepare and sell food that is safe to eat. Food causes illness because there are high levels of food-poisoning bacteria and these poisons are called toxins. “A way of preventing or limiting bacteria from multiplying or producing toxins in food is to control the temperature of the food by either keeping it cold or very hot”. Food Standards Australia requires potentially hazardous foods to be kept at 5degC or colder and prescribes that it is “safe for food to be between 5degC and 60degC for a limited time only”. Health regulators and inspectors commonly refer to the range between 5degC and 60degC as the DANGER ZONEfor perishable foods. Food Standards Australia defines potentially hazardous foods as foods that might contain food-poisoning bacteria and which will allow food-poisoning bacteria to multiply. Examples of potentially hazardous foods are listed as raw and cooked meat, smallgoods, dairy products, seafood, processed fruit and vegetables, cooked rice and pasta, foods containing eggs, beans and nuts and foods that contain these foods for example sandwiches and rolls. Many of these food types are also the foods that are inclusions in a balanced and nutritious diet.  Food Standards Australia also requires that potentially hazardous frozen foods are kept frozen when they are stored, displayed or transported. Whilst no specific temperature is specified for frozen food it must be kept frozen to remain safe. Temperature abuse of frozen food can also have a detrimental impact on eating quality. It is commonly accepted that -18degC is a safe temperature at which frozen food should be stored. It is also generally agreed that infrequent but consistent temperature abuse can have a detrimental impact on the shelf-life of food and with some foods temperature abuse can also affect its nutrient value. Food Standards Australia prescribes food that has been temperature abused for a continuous period of greater than 4-hours should be discarded. The NSW Food Authority recommends perishable foods should not be left in the danger zone for longer than 2-hours!

http://www.foodauthority.nsw.gov.au/consumers/keeping-food-safe/#How-can-I-make-sure-my-food-is-safe

 Data Acquisition Networks (DAN) provides cost effective temperature data loggers that automate data collection thereby enabling trained and experienced people to make jusgments on the suitability of food for human consumption. 

Contact Data Acquisition Networks
by email today and we will respond
quickly to your request.

If you prefer, Telephone +61 2 8838 2358

Temperature data loggers

Tuesday, July 14th, 2009

Temperature is critical to storage of a variety of items ranging from food to blood and a failure of storage temperature (temperature abuse) can result in problems ranging from simple spoilage (i.e. the product is no longer at its best) through to severe risk of safety to human health.

Temperature data loggers from Data Acquisition Networks can be fitted and operated for a fraction of the cost of the loss that will result from temperature abuse. DAN temperature data loggers also automate permanent record collection thereby enabling analysis of the likely severity of a temperature abuse incident.

Talk to Data Acquisition Networks (DAN) today about how automated data collection will ensure the safety of your product held in a temperature controlled environment.

Contact Data Acquisition Networks
by email today and we will respond
quickly to your request.

If you prefer, Telephone +61 2 8838 2358

What is the difference between a good temperature data logger and a poor effort?

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

The answer to this question lies in:

  1. The extent to which a temperature data logger automates the process of data collection
  2. Whether data monitoring is continuous
  3. Flexibility in system set-up

Temperature data loggers supplied by Data Acquisition Networks have an A+ rating on each of these criteria. Data collection is 24/7 and not just when someone has the time, data monitoring is continuous enabling food storage history to be tracked without gaps and the DAN website enables the user to logon much as you do to your bank account and change system parameters and set up alarms.

 Data Acquisition Networks is committed to ‘excellence and affordable solution’ for temperature data logging!

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