1. Flexible scope for ISO 15189 accreditation: a guidance prepared by the European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (EFLM) Working Group Accreditation and ISO/CEN standards (WG-A/ISO)
- Author
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Tatjana Vodnik, Marc H M Thelen, Christos Kroupis, Ludek Sprongl, Michel Vaubourdolle, Guilaime Boursier, Florent Vanstapel, Duilio Brugnoni, Maria Lohmander, Pika Mesko Brguljan, Willem Huisman, E. Barrett, Irina Ghita, Ines Vukasović, Cen standards, and Francisco A. Bernabeu Andreu
- Subjects
Quality Control ,Clinical Laboratory Techniques ,Chemistry ,business.industry ,Biochemistry (medical) ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Medical laboratory ,General Medicine ,Clinical Laboratory Services ,Accreditation ,Terminology ,Europe ,Quality management system ,Chemistry, Clinical ,Flexible scope ,ISO15189 ,Laboratory accreditation ,Humans ,Position paper ,Medicine ,Engineering ethics ,Clinical Medicine ,business ,Competence (human resources) ,Scientific disciplines ,Certification and Accreditation - Abstract
The recent revision of ISO15189 has further strengthened its position as the standard for accreditation for medical laboratories. Both for laboratories and their customers it is important that the scope of such accreditation is clear. Therefore the European co-operation for accreditation (EA) demands that the national bodies responsible for accreditation describe the scope of every laboratory accreditation in a way that leaves no room for doubt about the range of competence of the particular laboratories. According to EA recommendations scopes may be fixed, mentioning every single test that is part of the accreditation, or flexible, mentioning all combinations of medical field, examination type and materials for which the laboratory is competent. Up to now national accreditation bodies perpetuate use of fixed scopes, partly by inertia, partly out of fear that a too flexible scope may lead to over-valuation of the competence of laboratories, most countries only use fixed scopes. The EA however promotes use of flexible scopes, since this allows for more readily innovation, which contributes to quality in laboratory medicine. In this position paper, the Working Group Accreditation and ISO/CEN Standards belonging to the Quality and Regulation Committee of the EFLM recommends using an approach that has led to successful introduction of the flexible scope for ISO15189 accreditation as intended in EA-4/17 in The Netherlands. The approach is risk-based, discipline and competence-based, and focuses on defining a uniform terminology transferable across the borders of scientific disciplines, laboratories and countries.
- Published
- 2015