• Home
  • Monitoring a Quality Laboratory to Prevent Non-Compliance

Monitoring a Quality Laboratory to Prevent Non-Compliance

Everyone in a laboratory under compliance knows about 3-sigma out-of-control issues. Can the operation be monitored to avoid these? How? This webinar will cover the basic statistics of compliance and non-compliance and how to use a statistical approach to monitor the operation to ensure that it is under control and to see when a problem is arising, but before it is outside of 3-sigma.Learning ObjectivesMany problems that arise in an analysis result from causes that start small and grow over time. Others result from an unplanned change in a procedure or the performance of an instrument. These manifest themselves in changed patterns in certain measurable variables. The use of statistical methods to assess and monitor certain variables will be covered, highlighting the predictable patterns.Who Should AttendResearch associates, lab chemists, lab supervisors, and quality officers.Topic Background Data quality and compliance to a required level of performance are measured by statistical tools. Usually in compliance, there is a very heavy weighing towards only 3-sigma deviations. But statistics give much more than that. There are other signs that being “out of control” is a building situation. These other statistical patterns can be used to trigger preventive actions without the dire consequence of non-compliance.

Everyone in a laboratory under compliance knows about 3-sigma out-of-control issues. Can the operation be monitored to avoid these? How? This webinar will cover the basic statistics of compliance and non-compliance and how to use a statistical approach to monitor the operation to ensure that it is under control and to see when a problem is arising, but before it is outside of 3-sigma.

Learning Objectives

Many problems that arise in an analysis result from causes that start small and grow over time. Others result from an unplanned change in a procedure or the performance of an instrument. These manifest themselves in changed patterns in certain measurable variables. The use of statistical methods to assess and monitor certain variables will be covered, highlighting the predictable patterns.

Who Should Attend

Research associates, lab chemists, lab supervisors, and quality officers.

Topic Background

Data quality and compliance to a required level of performance are measured by statistical tools. Usually in compliance, there is a very heavy weighing towards only 3-sigma deviations. But statistics give much more than that. There are other signs that being “out of control” is a building situation. These other statistical patterns can be used to trigger preventive actions without the dire consequence of non-compliance.