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Physical Hazards in Food: Fact Sheet #16

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FACT SHEET #16

Physical Hazards in Food


Physical hazards are either foreign materials unintentionally introduced to food products (ex: metal fragments in
ground meat) or naturally occurring objects (ex: bones in fish) that are hazardous to the consumer. A physical
hazard contaminates a food product at any stage of production. Food processors should take adequate
measures to avoid physical hazards in food.

Physical Hazards Risk in Food

Common Physical Hazards

Hard or sharp objects are potential physical


hazards and can cause:
cuts to the mouth or throat
damage to the intestines
damage to teeth or gums

Common sources of physical hazards in food include:


Glass: light bulbs, glass containers and glass food
containers

The presence of physical hazards in food can


trigger a food recall, affecting the brand name of
your company and product.

Factors Determining a Potential Risk


Factors that cause potential risk to consumers in food
products include:
Size: Health Canada states that anything in a food
product, that is extraneous, and measures two
millimeters or more in size can be a health risk.
Type of consumer: Products that target infants, the
elderly, etc. have a higher risk level.
Type of product: The form the product takes such as
infant formulas, beverages, etc. can increase risk
level.
Physical characteristics: hardness, shape and
sharpness of a product can affect risk level.

Metal: fragments from equipment such as splinters,


blades, needles, utensils, staples, etc.
Plastics: material used for packaging, fragments of
utensils used for cleaning equipment
Stones: incorporated in field crops, such as peas
and beans, during harvesting
Wood: splinters from wood structures and wooden
pallets used to store or transport ingredients or
food products
Natural components of food: hard or sharp parts of
a food (ex: shells in nut products) if consumers do
not expect them

Preventing Common Physical Hazards


There are many ways food processors can prevent
physical hazards in food products.
Assess every step of your operation for potential
sources of contamination:

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Inspect raw materials and food ingredients for field


contaminants, such as stones in cereals that were
not found during receiving.
Handle food according to Good Manufacturing
Practices (GMPs). (Ex: avoid inclusion of physical
hazards such as jewelry or false fingernails in food
products by using proper personnel practices.)
Eliminate potential sources of physical hazards
in processing and storage areas. (Ex: use
protective acrylic bulbs or lamp covers to prevent
contamination by breakable glass.)
Install an effective detection and elimination
system for physical hazards. (Ex: metal detectors
or magnets will detect metal fragments in the
production line while filters or screens will remove
foreign objects at the receiving point.)
Establish an effective maintenance program for
the equipment in your facility to avoid sources of
physical hazards such as foreign materials that can
come from worn out equipment.

Detecting and Eliminating Physical Hazards


There are several methods available to detect foreign
bodies on food processing production lines:
Magnets can be used to attract and remove metal
from products.
Metal detectors can detect metal in food and
should be set up to reject products if metal is
detected. Equipment should be properly maintained
to ensure it is always accurate and doesnt produce
false positives (See Fact Sheet #9 in this series, for
more information on metal detectors).
X-Ray machines can be used to identify hazards
such as stones, bones and hard plastics, as well as
metal.
Food radar systems transmit low-power microwaves
through food products to identify foreign bodies
such as metals, plastics, bones or kernels in food.

For information on the Food Safety Program contact the CVO/Food Safety Knowledge Centre.
For technical information, call 204-795-7968 or 204-795-8418 in Winnipeg; or e-mail foodsafety@gov.mb.ca.
For general information, contact your local GO Centre.

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