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Prescriptive approach, to quality assurance

With a prescriptive approach to quality assessment, duplicate samples, blanks, standards, and spike recoveries are measured following a specific protocol. The result for each analysis is then compared with a single predetermined limit. If this limit is exceeded, an appropriate corrective action is taken. Prescriptive approaches to quality assurance are common for programs and laboratories subject to federal regulation. For example, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) specifies quality assurance practices that must be followed by laboratories analyzing products regulated by the FDA. [Pg.712]

Example of a prescriptive approach to quality assurance. Adapted from Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, "Handbook for Analytical Quality Control in Water and Wastewater Laboratories," March 1979. [Pg.713]

Once a control chart is in use, new quality assessment data should be added at a rate sufficient to ensure that the system remains in statistical control. As with prescriptive approaches to quality assurance, when a quality assessment sample is found to be out of statistical control, all samples analyzed since the last successful verification of statistical control must be reanalyzed. The advantage of a performance-based approach to quality assurance is that a laboratory may use its experience, guided by control charts, to determine the frequency for collecting quality assessment samples. When the system is stable, quality assessment samples can be acquired less frequently. [Pg.721]


See other pages where Prescriptive approach, to quality assurance is mentioned: [Pg.714]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.712 , Pg.713 , Pg.713 ]




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