Training handbook · Water Chocolate Coffee beans Cup, Saucer, Spoon Grinder. Training handbook Client ... • Complete the FMEA Table • Work in groups . Risk Priority Number (RPN)
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The handbook is organized to focus on skills and revisions. These lessons allow you to learn and practice the skills used throughout the course. The following icons are used in this handbook:
Activity Revision exercise or written task
Important Important points to remember for the assessment
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1. The Perfect Cappuccino – Inputs and Outputs (QTPP)
In order to make the perfect cappuccino there are various inputs and outputs. The outputs can also be termed the Quality Target Product Profile (QTPP). In the space provided, list the inputs and outputs for a cappuccino.
Complete a risk assessment for making a cappuccino using the table provided. Risk rate each process stage against the inputs as Low (L), Medium (M) or High (H)
Repeat the risk assessment for making a cappuccino assuming the control strategy is in place. Risk rate each process stage against the inputs as Low (L), Medium (M) or High (H)
For this activity we will examine the hazards associated with getting on a train. Let’s just focus on hazards associated with the use of the train doors.
In relation to the train doors, what are the hazards associated with getting on a train? Use the table on the following page to record your answers:
• In the first column, list the hazard (potential source of harm) • In the second column, list the harm (the potential damage caused by the hazard) • In the third column list the control strategy
6. Determining risk controls – PIP breast implants
In 2013, the PIP breast implant scandal hit the news. Did the manufacturer determine their design controls properly? As the company executives were jailed for fraud, unfortunately risk control was probably not part of the product life-cycle. Read the following news excerpts and complete the table fields. The man who sparked a global health scare by selling breast implants containing industrial silicone was jailed for four years yesterday by a court in Marseille. Jean-Claude Mas, founder of Poly Implant Prothèse (PIP), was convicted of aggravated fraud. Four other defendants, former PIP executives or managers, were also found guilty and given jail sentences. The firm caused an international health scare when it was found that the faulty implants had been made with substandard and non-authorised material not fit for humans. At one time PIP was the third biggest global supplier of breast implants, used in an estimated 300,000 women in 65 countries. Some of the women were given the faulty implants during breast reconstruction operations after undergoing mastectomies as part of their cancer treatment. At their month-long trial in May the accused had admitted fraudulently using unapproved gel in the implants, at an annual profit of €1m, but Mas had denied it was harmful, while three of his co-accused said they were unaware of the possible dangers. http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/10/french-breast-implant-pip-jean-claude-mas-jailed
Complete the following table by proposing possible protective measures for equivalent implants manufactured by a responsible company.