2.6 Regulatory requirements Flashcards

1
Q

What is a SAC?

Name a few categories and what defines them

A

SAC- severity assessment codes

  • Depends on:
    1. States differ
    2. Consequence serious, major, moderate, minor, minimum AND likelihood of occurrence, almost certain- rare

SAC 1: extreme risk, death or likely permanent harm , immediate action, root cause analysis, reportable incident brief (RIB) to DoH

SAC 2: high risk, temporary harm, permanent lessening of bodily functioning, senior management attention, notification to DoH/

SAC 3: medium risk- increased level of care ie rv evaluation, additional investigation, management responsibility specified- undertake practice improvement project

SAC4: low risk, no harm or near miss, manage by routine procedures

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2
Q

How long should records and diagnostic materials be retained for in the laboratory?

A

NPAAC 2018
Retention of documents
- personnel: 4 years+ period of employment
- equipment: life of + 4 years
- QC and QA: 3 years
- request , analysis records: 4 years
- original report- 7years for adults, 7years from age of majority for minors

  • all specimens unless otherwise stated : 7days from date of receipt or until 2 days after issued report
    • serum/plasma infectious serology all sera 4 months
    • antenatal sera 12 months
    • syphilis 12 months if reactive
  • frozen tissue block 1month incl DIF
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3
Q

Define an in vitro diagnostic device (IVD) and an in house IVD

A

IVD: any material used alone or in combination w other goods for the intended use of in vitro exam of human specimens for diagnostic purposes

E.g. assay kits, instruments, reagents, calibrators, control material, software

In house IVD- is one that is developed or modified within a lab to assist in clinical diagnosis/mx

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4
Q

Outline IVD categories and if any specific regulations are required

A

depends on intended purpose of device and level of risk to patient/public if incorrect result

Ascending risk
class 1 : no public risk or low personal
class 2: low public or mod personal ie preg test kit
class 3: most lab diagnostic tests * mod  (chalmydia, syphilis) public or high personal
class 4: transfusion and transplant risk tests; high risk pathogens and load tests, safety of blood/tissue for specific recipient e.g. HIV, high public health risk

Class 4 in house IVD must be

  • registered and pre approved by TGA for ARTG
  • inform NATA
  • full validation
  • MSAC/PSTC for billing

Class 1-3 still inform NATA for scope of testing

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5
Q

Outline some of the issues to consider when releasing tissue or specimen to patient

A
  • lab does not own specimen
    1. Clear request reason which is reasonable
  • cultural issues around Maori patients
    2. Duty of care to the patient confirm applicant identity
  • do not release to unauthorised 3rd party
    3. May seek legal advice if unusual request
    4. minimum retention time does not apply if returned to patient
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6
Q

Define a non -conformity?

A

Any event that does not conform with the standard or usual procedures of that lab or with its quality management system

e.g. errors, complaints, document changes, safety issues, supplier failures

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7
Q

Why are laboratory audits performed?

A
  • comply with standards ISO/NATA
  • ensure all staff are carrying duties appropriately
  • detect any risky areas that may not conform to standard
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8
Q

Name and explain the role of main pathology organisations in Australia

A
  1. RCPA royal college of pathologists Australia
    - main body training/professional development
    - college members Australasia, hk, Singapore, Malaysia, Saudi arabia
    - not for profit, council/board of directors
    - Role: training, exam, CPD, prof practice standards, accreditation w NATa, quality control, advocacy
  2. NATA - national association of testing authorities
    - independent private company; technical competence for customers
    - council of members /board
    - accreditation needed for bill medicare
    - educational; publications, training QC programs
  3. NPAAC- national pathology of accreditation advisory council
    - division federal dept health ageing, rep from states/terretories/peak prof bodies
    - develop/mx standards of practice and guiddelins for accreditation acc ISO 15189 international standards organisation
    - educational program
    - standards (mandatory nata accreditation) guidelines (consensus recommendations)
  4. TGA- therapeutic goods administration
    - reg authority on therapeutic goods
    - federal dept health and ageing, TGA 1989 act
    - assess and monitor therpauetic goods; reg, analysis, ARTG aust register the goods, accreditation
    - executive;
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9
Q

What are the types of medical laboratories and NATA guidelines regarding supervision of these labs?

A

Designated person- qualif, competence, scope of practice with responsibility for clinical governance, provides oversight and management of staff/and processes

GX- FT supervision of DP, testing delegated to other pathologists (>2 FTE)

GY- under FT supervision of DP in GX laboratory, supervision in 1 or more provided onsite FT pathologists w relevant scope of practice (<2 FTE)

B- integrated with GX or GY- under direction of DP. point of care. DP/quality m visit once per year, delegation of supervision to onsite pathologist. Lab with scientist at least 2 years experience as onsite manager, if no onsite pathologist w scope of practice, need remote access to LIS/quality system, supervising at least 2 days per year

s- specialised- limited range of test for a target population, not a pathologist only relevant to qualification, onsite clinical scientist

m- medical- lab within medical practice limited range of tests only for patients of medical practice

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10
Q

What are requirements for in house IVDs and their exceptions?

A

Must be validated otherwise not used to provide services

EXCEPT if cannot be validated AND no alternative validated IVD

Only use clinically for new/uncommon, time sensitvie in public health emergency

Lab needs documented plan for validation

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11
Q

what is the difference between certification and accreditation?

A

Certification - organisation deemed to have appropriate documented procedure and services to meet reg requirements

Accreditation- process by which facility deemed technically competent/evidence perform tasks /sound quality system

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12
Q

What are the management requirements outlined in the ISO 15189?

A

Requirements for quality management of the lab

Organisation/hierarchy
QMS
document control/retention of records
Referral labs
External services/supplies
Non conformities/ corrective action, preventative action 
Continual improvement
Internal audits and evaluation
Management plans
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13
Q

What are the technical requirements outlined in the ISO 15189?

A
Personnel
Environment/accommodation
Equipment, reagent, consumables
Pre exam
Exam process
Post exam process
Ensuring quality of exam
Reporting of results
Release of results
LIS
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14
Q

What are equipment records?

A

Under NATA accreditation requirement

Documented procedure

  • selection, purchasing, management of equipment
  • acceptance testing
  • instructions
  • calibr/traceability
  • maintenance, repair record log
  • adverse incident reporting
  • general
    • identify, manufactuer, model, serial, contact supplier, date of receiving, location, condition, initialy acceptabiity for use, scheduled maintenance, performance records, damage, modification, repair history

maintenance log - preventative 6-12months

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15
Q

Equipment maintenance at ACT Pathology

A
  • pipette
    – NATA accredited pipette assessor/calibration
  • scale
  • temperature
    – thermometer
    4) Labguard’s calibration of fridge/freezer thermometers- how do they do this? Do they use a second thermometer to measure temperature of i) fluid in fridge ii) air in freezer??
    We calibrate our Labguard probes in-house. Labguard calibrate them in compliance with COFRAC, the French counterpart of NATA. If you check on the NATA website, it should be possible to see if NATA have MRA (Mutual Recognition Agreement) with COFRAC.
    We use a reference thermometer that has a NATA calibration certificate, to measure the same environment that the working thermometer is monitoring and at the same time. A comparison is made of the measurements of the reference and working devices. The are acceptability thresholds for the performance of working temperature measuring devices.
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16
Q

What are the components of a SOP?

A

Background theory
Principle of test/method

Preanalytical

  • specimen transport, collection, storage
  • specimen registration, data entry
  • need for control
  • after hours testing

Analytical

  • kit, reagent, machine
  • actual method lined
  • QCs, LJ chart
  • reference range
  • troubleshooting of common issues

Post analytical

  • data entry
  • how result reported
  • interpretation of report/significance

References

17
Q

Name some of the activities that must be supervised in the laboratory (11)

(NPAAC supervision requirements )

A
  • performance rv of senior staff yearly
  • documentation of incidents/corrective action
  • risk management plan
  • EQAP participation
  • IQC/audits, CAR
  • review of safety records
  • proposed new test/equipment
  • physical inspection of lab
  • staff meeting w educational
  • continuing education
  • evidence of liaision with clinical staff
18
Q

How are temperature measuring devices calibrated?

A
  • Reference thermometer (liquid in glass or digital) NATA calib certificate, calib every 5 years
  • working temperature measuring devices (Labguard probe, equipment digital display, digital thermometer, temp data logger) , 6month calibration against ref thermometer,
  • then futher devices liquid in glass or temp monitoring 3 point calibration annualy or 2 yearly

Labguard sensors over freezers, fridges checks every 15mins automatically logs

Refer to procedure manual in quality book

max allowable error +/- 0.5deg, 2deg in some areas

All devices have an inventory number and log

19
Q

How are pipettes calibrated?

A

Calibration for micro max volumes 2ul and less and critical volumes by Pathtech ext company, others by ACT pathology personnel using gravimetric principle (using 5 decimal place balance and pipette calibration software on computer)

calibration check 13monthly

inaccuracy/imprecision limit ISO 8655

10 replicate weighing
check range- max, 10% of max or min volume

certain temperature/humidity due to evaporation