LQMS – Introduction Lesson Voiceover Transcript
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April 2020 LQMS – Introduction Lesson Voiceover Transcript Page of
Slide 1 Introduction to the CLSI Laboratory Quality Management System Certificate Program
Welcome to this first lesson of the CLSI Laboratory Quality Management System Certificate program. This lesson introduces you to the CLSI laboratory Quality Management System—abbreviated as QMS—and explains how your laboratory can use the QMS to improve quality and directly affect patient safety. In this lesson you will also learn how the certificate program is organized.
Slide 2 Learning Objectives
This slide displays the learning objectives for this introduction lesson. Following this lesson, you will be able to:
- Describe how CLSI derived the model for implementing a laboratory quality management system.
- Diagram the model structure and explain its parts.
- Distinguish between the roles of quality control, quality assurance and QMS.
- Discuss the advantages of having a laboratory QMS.
- Describe the four different types of quality costs.
- And lastly, explain how this certificate program is organized..
Slide 3 Some Requirements for a Laboratory
Let’s look at typical requirements for laboratories.
- There are international requirements for laboratories in every country such as those found in ISO 15189 and ISO 17025 and the World Health Organization WHO.
- There are national requirements for laboratories and transfusion services, such as the United States Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments of 1988 and Good Manufacturing Practice found in developed countries.
- There are safety requirements that affect laboratories such as the United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration, abbreviated as OSHA.
- There are national and international requirements for transportation of biohazardous materials such as those by the United States Department of Transportation, abbreviated as DOT and the International Air Transport Association, abbreviated as IATA.
- There are also internationally applied accreditation requirements, such as those published by the Institute for Quality Management in Health Care, The Joint Commission, the College of American Pathologists, the AABB, the former American Association of Blood Banks, and COLA, the former Commission on Office Laboratory Accreditation.
- The important dilemma for laboratories anywhere is how to make sense of all the various requirements imposed on them. Can we make sense of them?
Slide 4 A Generic Management Foundation
CLSI refers to the documents published by the organizations shown on the previous slide as “the bedrock documents” because they form a solid foundation of regulatory and accreditation requirements for medical laboratories.
- This bedrock foundation is shown as the purple bar at the bottom of this slide.
- The national and international regulatory requirements that apply to medical laboratories are shown on this list and correspond to the ones shown on the previous slide.
- The international and national voluntary hospital and laboratory accreditation organizations are shown on this list.
This is a very large number of organizations that have requirements for laboratories! This is a huge number of requirements that laboratories must fulfill to provide quality services for patients and other customers!
Slide 5 Some Requirements for a Laboratory
Is it possible for a single laboratory or a laboratory system to have a single program for managing quality that includes all the applicable requirements?
- The answer is yes. We can make sense of the requirements — by sorting them into common elements. On the next slide you’ll see how this was done.
Slide 6 CLSI Sorted the Requirements
In the late 1990s, CLSI—then known as NCCLS—convened a workgroup to develop guidance for laboratories on how to implement a quality management system.
- We made photocopies of the published requirements for laboratories. We really did use scissors to cut each statement, clause, or numbered item.
- Each item was sorted by topic—such as personnel, equipment, safety, documents, and so on. For example, all the organizations have published requirements that the laboratory conducts personnel training. All the replicates were then removed.
- What remained was the single set of elements that covered all requirements for that one topic.
- The elements were arranged in the order in which they occurred in the laboratory. For example, each instrument and piece of equipment has a life span. Your laboratory selects, procures, installs, uses, maintains, and retires equipment—in that order.
- Each topic was given the heading of Quality System Essential—abbreviated as QSE—…
- …and a name representing its topic. For example, QSE Personnel Management, QSE Documents and Records Management, QSE Equipment Management, and so forth.
- The QSEs were then arranged in a logical order. This is the order to consider when starting a new laboratory, a new section within a laboratory, or new laboratory examinations—or, when changing a laboratory service or process.
Slide 7 QSE: All Requirements for One Topic
When the sorting was finished, 12 topics emerged - as shown on this slide. This CLSI Laboratory Quality Management System Certificate Program contains one lesson for each of the 12 QSEs. You will learn about the requirements for each QSE and suggested ways to fulfill the requirements in your laboratory.
This common framework for laboratory requirements is significant for the following reasons:
First, the past two decades has proven that any requirement ever written for laboratories or ever will be written in the future will fit into one of these QSEs. Thus, this common framework will remain unchanged into the future. As new international and national requirements are added or requirements are modified or changed, CLSI incorporates them into revisions of guideline QMS01 so that the QSEs always remain current.
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