1 / 56

Accreditation or Certification for Laboratories?

Accreditation or Certification for Laboratories?. Kyriacos C. Tsimillis. In Today’s Society…. some trends are of importance free movement of goods elimination of technical barriers to trade broadening of quality concept. Quality Issues are….

harrywells
Download Presentation

Accreditation or Certification for Laboratories?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Accreditation or Certification for Laboratories? Kyriacos C. Tsimillis

  2. In Today’s Society… • some trends are of importance • free movement of goods • elimination of technical barriers to trade • broadening of quality concept

  3. Quality Issues are… • nowadays considered to be of highest importance as a result of increasing awareness of existing needs. • This is illustrated in • legislative requirements and • high competition on quality aspects

  4. Specific Needs… • exist in some sectors • food • health care services • environmental studies • New Approach Directives • dangerous substances

  5. There is a Need to… • create an international technical language to ensure common understanding!

  6. As a Result… • efficient tools and mechanisms are required. • Emphasis is given on their worldwide implementation in a harmonised way

  7. Tools and Mechanisms • Standardization • Laboratory infrastructure • Quality management • Metrology • Accreditation • GLP

  8. Tools and Mechanisms (cont.) • Technical Notification • Environmental management • Modules/Notified Bodies • Harmonised Standards • Ecolabeling • Occupational health and safety

  9. The Infrastructure Required… • consists of • Laboratories • Standardization bodies • Certification bodies • Inspection bodies • Accreditation bodies

  10. How can We be Sure that… • products and services meet the specifications? • By “conformity assessment”, i.e. checking that products and services meet the relevant standard´s specifications.

  11. Demands Accreditation Certification Body Inspection Body Laboratory Demands Market Product/ Service Consumer Legislation Supplier Requirements Conformity Assessment

  12. ISO/IEC Guide 2 and EN 45020 • refer to definitions and terminology of standardization and related activities.

  13. Following the Definitions… • Accreditation refers to competence to carry out specific tasks • Certification refers to assurance of conformity to specified requirements

  14. Testing is Carried out… by laboratories • in the private sector • in – house • second party • third party • in the public sector • competent authorities

  15. We need to Measure! • If you cannot measure something • it doesn't exist! • Therefore we need • methodology • equipment • personnel

  16. The Role of Laboratories • drafting of standards • development of new methods • implementation of standards, technical regulations and the legislation • provision of services (testing, calibration, consultancy)

  17. Accreditation Body Legislation Calibration Laboratories Laboratories LABORATORY • Suppliers • Equipment • Reagents, CRM’s Certification Body Clients The Laboratory Environment

  18. Laboratories Need… • to demonstrate their technical competence and reliability • to this end they need also to have policies how to estimate the uncertainty of their measurements

  19. Laboratories’ Operationis Based on… • Quality System • methodology • equipment (suitability, calibration, • maintenance, conditions) • personnel (competence) • determination of uncertainty

  20. Basic Documents for Laboratories • ISO 17025 • EA Guidelines • ISO 9000 • ISO 14000 (if applicable) • GLP (if applicable) • Legislation

  21. To Avoid any Hidden Barriers… • to the free movement of goods, services and personnel, conformity assessment activities should be homogeneous and be implemented according to relevant Guides of ISO/IEC and EA Guidelines

  22. Sources of Information • www.european-accreditation.org • www.eurachem.ul.pt • www.eurolab.org • www.ilac.org • www.irmm.jrc.be

  23. Accreditation and Certification present both • similarities related to the audit-based nature of the procedures and • differences with regard to the tasks and the resulting procedure

  24. They are Both Related to… • quality assurance policies • considered of high importance tools • in today’s society with regard to the free movement of goods

  25. However… This is not enough and does not fit the purpose!

  26. We Need Something More! • We need tools for the assessment of the technical competence of laboratories to carry out specified tasks

  27. Is there any Confusion… • on the use of these two procedures, their significance and their role within conformity assessment activities? • If so, why does this happen?

  28. Can Both Activities… • be used by laboratories to document their competence and the reliability of their results? • Do these two procedures represent equivalent criteria?

  29. Main Differences Refer to… • the objective and content • the documentation • assessors’ competence • procedure of assessment • the use of the logo • how wide the scope is

  30. Differences in the Procedure refer to the following issues • validation of test methods • expression of uncertainty • calibration of equipment • competence of personnel

  31. What about Uncertainty? • How educated is the client to consider properly and make correct use of the expressed uncertainty of measurement?

  32. The Meaning of Uncertainty • is not well understood by the clients. • They may not choose a laboratory which produces results that are “uncertain” to some extent!

  33. Technical Competence of Personnel Means… • Suitable academic qualifications • Adequate experience/training • Awareness and familiarisation with particular methods and techniques

  34. Quality Means… • meeting the customers’ needs. • How clear are these needs for the customers and how are they expressed in the communication with the laboratories?

  35. Who are the Customers? • competent authorities • industrial units • purchasers • individuals • other laboratories

  36. ISO 9000 Provides… • for suppliers and sub-contractors to be included in the approved list. • Relevant requirements are specified in the Quality System.

  37. The Most Usual Requirement… • is ISO 9000 certification • this refers also to laboratories that are listed as approved suppliers/ subcontractors

  38. A Survey was Carried out… by ILAC in 1996 to evaluate the competence of the laboratories, the needs of their customers and market trends.

  39. According to the Survey… • a small percentage of laboratories are certified • big laboratories use accreditation for ISO 9000 compliance • accreditation is preferred to certification to demonstrate technical competence

  40. Suggestions were Made … • for the revision of ISO/IEC Guide 25 and EN 45001 and harmonization with ISO 9000 on management issues • this would facilitate the promotion of mutual recognition of this part of the system.

  41. The Standard ISO 17025 • has replaced the former European standard EN 45001 to ensure a worldwide acceptance of a unique document for the assessment of laboratories under accreditation

  42. 1999 Edition of the Standard • provides for a clarification of the situation • it classifies the main requirements in two main categories, • the Management Issues and • the Technical Competence Issues.

  43. The Structure of the Standard… • enables a direct correlation with ISO 9000:1994. • ISO 17025 specifies management requirements and technical requirements in separate chapters. • The former corresponds to ISO 9000 requirements

  44. Therefore the Two Standards… • can easily be correlated and provide the basis for comparison of the two procedures they refer to

  45. The Standard ISO 9000:2000 • is a new version of the previously existing ISO 9000 series. • This fact doesn’t alter the findings of the correlation made above

  46. It is Expected that… • in this way an agreement for mutual recognition could be established thus enabling laboratories to avoid duplication in work and additional costs.

  47. To Achieve Reliability… • a Laboratory needs to take some basic steps, starting with the preparation and implementation ofa Quality System.

  48. Accreditation Establishing Reliability… • Reliability • Competence of personnel • Suitability of equipment • Calibration of equipment • Interlaboratory comparisons • Method validation Quality System

  49. When Taking the First Step… • the Laboratory should prepare and implement a Quality System as described by either ISO 9000 or ISO 17025. • This step does not impose the need for certification

  50. Further to a Quality System…. We need to ensure factors contributing to the reliability of the Laboratory • Technical competence of personnel • Adequacy of infrastructure • Fitness of methodology

More Related