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Quality Assurance Instruments in the Ready-To-Eat Food Industry: A Literature Analysis Cover

Quality Assurance Instruments in the Ready-To-Eat Food Industry: A Literature Analysis

By: Ewa Szataniak  
Open Access
|Feb 2026

Abstract

Ready-to-eat (RTE) foods require robust, auditable quality assurance (QA) because consumers apply little or no processing. We performed a structured Scopus review (2015–2026; search date: 19 October 2025) with VOSviewer bibliometrics to map QA tools and emerging directions. The corpus comprised 1,813 peer-reviewed items. Cooccurrence and overlay analyses indicate a dominant operational focus on shelf-life and post-process stability driven by packaging (MAP, active/edible coatings), temperature control (validation, rapid cooling), and microbiological verification (e.g., Listeria), supported by environmental monitoring. A stable “core toolkit” underpins these practices: HACCP with prerequisite programs, ISO 22000-based FSMS, and GFSI-benchmarked schemes (BRCGS, IFS, FSSC 22000, SQF), often alongside ISO 9001. At process level, SPC and FMEA – plus, to a lesser extent, Six Sigma and QbD – target critical operations. System acronyms are under-represented in keywords, suggesting fuller visibility in texts. Digitalisation is rising: sensor-enabled cold-chain monitoring, blockchain pilots for traceability, and predictive analytics, with scalability challenges for SMEs.

Language: English
Page range: 1 - 9
Submitted on: Dec 11, 2025
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Accepted on: Jan 12, 2026
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Published on: Feb 3, 2026
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2026 Ewa Szataniak, published by Quality and Production Managers Association
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.