Food Product Tracing Technology Capabilities and Interoperability

被引:8
|
作者
Bhatt, Tejas [1 ]
Zhang, Jianrong [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Food Technologists, Washington, DC 20036 USA
关键词
food defense; interoperability; product tracing; traceability pilots;
D O I
10.1111/1750-3841.12299
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
Despite the best efforts of food safety and food defense professionals, contaminated food continues to enter the food supply. It is imperative that contaminated food be removed from the supply chain as quickly as possible to protect public health and stabilize markets. To solve this problem, scores of technology companies purport to have the most effective, economical product tracing system. This study sought to compare and contrast the effectiveness of these systems at analyzing product tracing information to identify the contaminated ingredient and likely source, as well as distribution of the product. It also determined if these systems can work together to better secure the food supply (their interoperability). Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) hypothesized that when technology providers are given a full set of supply-chain data, even for a multi-ingredient product, their systems will generally be able to trace a contaminated product forward and backward through the supply chain. However, when provided with only a portion of supply-chain data, even for a product with a straightforward supply chain, it was expected that interoperability of the systems will be lacking and that there will be difficulty collaborating to identify sources and/or recipients of potentially contaminated product. IFT provided supply-chain data for one complex product to 9 product tracing technology providers, and then compared and contrasted their effectiveness at analyzing product tracing information to identify the contaminated ingredient and likely source, as well as distribution of the product. A vertically integrated foodservice restaurant agreed to work with IFT to secure data from its supply chain for both a multi-ingredient and a simpler product. Potential multi-ingredient products considered included canned tuna, supreme pizza, and beef tacos. IFT ensured that all supply-chain data collected did not include any proprietary information or information that would otherwise identify the supply-chain partner who provided the information prior to sharing this information with product tracing technology providers. The 9 traceability solution providers who agreed to participate in this project have their systems deployed in a wide range of sectors within the food industry including, but not limited to, livestock, dairy, produce, fruits, seafood, meat, and pork; as well as in pharmaceutical, automotive, retail, and other industries. Some have also been implemented across the globe including Canada, China, USA, Norway, and the EU, among others. This broad commercial use ensures that the findings of this work are applicable to a broad spectrum of the food system. Six of the 9 participants successfully completed the data entry phase of this test. To verify successful data entry for these 6, a demo or screenshots of the data set from each system's user interface was requested. Only 4 of the 6 were able to provide us with this evidence for verification. Of the 6 that completed data entry and moved on to the scenarios phase of the test, 5 were able to provide us with the responses to the scenarios. Time metrics were useful for evaluating the scalability and usability of each technology. Scalability was derived from the time it took to enter the nonstandardized data set into the system (ranges from 7 to 11 d). Usability was derived from the time it took to query the scenarios and provide the results (from a few hours to a week). The time was measured in days it took for the participants to respond after we supplied them all the information they would need to successfully execute each test/scenario. Two of the technology solution providers successfully implemented and participated in a proof-of-concept interoperable framework during Year 2 of this study. While not required, they also demonstrated this interoperability capability on the FSMA-mandated food product tracing pilots for the U. S. FDA. This has significant real-world impact since the demonstration of interoperability enables U. S. FDA to obtain evidence on the importance and impact of data-sharing moving forward. Another real-world accomplishment is the modification or upgrade of commercial technology solutions to enhance or implement interoperability. As these systems get deployed by clients in the food industry, interoperability will no longer be an afterthought but will be built into their traceability systems. In turn, industry and regulators will better understand the capabilities of the currently available technologies, and the technology provider community will identify ways in which their systems may be further developed to increase interoperability and utility.
引用
收藏
页码:B28 / B33
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Product Tracing in Food Systems
    不详
    FOOD AUSTRALIA, 2010, 62 (1-2): : 34 - 34
  • [2] Important Steps to Improve Product Tracing in Food Systems
    Gillette, Marianne
    FOOD TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 63 (11) : 11 - 11
  • [3] Study on product quality tracing technology in supply chain
    Zhang, G. B.
    Ran, Y.
    Ren, X. L.
    COMPUTERS & INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING, 2011, 60 (04) : 863 - 871
  • [4] Device tracing capabilities
    Alexeev, Alexander
    Research Disclosure, 2006, (509): : 1155 - 1156
  • [5] Application of Internet of Things Technology in Tracing to Food Source
    Shi Ruizhi
    Yang Kun
    Su Qiang
    Zhou Xiao
    Shi Hanzhong
    RESEARCH ON FOOD PACKAGING TECHNOLOGY, 2014, 469 : 467 - +
  • [6] Food Safety Tracing Technology Based on Block Chain
    Li, Mingjia
    Wang, Deng
    Zeng, Xiaoshan
    Bai, Qianlan
    Sun, Yaojie
    Shipin Kexue/Food Science, 2019, 40 (03): : 279 - 285
  • [7] General technological capabilities, product market fragmentation, and markets for technology
    Gambardella, Alfonso
    Giarratana, Marco S.
    RESEARCH POLICY, 2013, 42 (02) : 315 - 325
  • [8] Pilot Projects for Improving Product Tracing along the Food Supply System
    Bhatt, Tejas
    Hickey, Caitlin
    McEntire, Jennifer C.
    JOURNAL OF FOOD SCIENCE, 2013, 78 : B34 - B39
  • [9] The Application of Caching Technology in Food-Safety Tracing System
    Liao, YingJie
    Chen, Jia
    Yan, ZheQiong
    ADVANCES IN COMPUTER SCIENCE, ENVIRONMENT, ECOINFORMATICS, AND EDUCATION, PT 5, 2011, 218 : 543 - 547
  • [10] Thirty Years of Aquatic Food Product Technology
    Sivertsvik, Morten
    JOURNAL OF AQUATIC FOOD PRODUCT TECHNOLOGY, 2022, 31 (01) : 1 - 1