Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
The National Oil Spill Commission released a preliminary chapter of its report today. This is the commission charged with finding out what went wrong with the Deepwater Horizon / Macondo oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico that blew up in 2010 and spilled 4 million barrels of oil and killed 11 workers.
Whenever there are big stories in the media, we like to take a look at them to see if we can learn anything, find any connection between the disaster and our own situation in the medical laboratory community. But from a distance, it's hard to see any similarities between oil rigs and labs, right?
Right?
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Earlier, we posted an article on the website with a darkly humorous take on the passing of the CLSI EP22 guideline, which voted itself out of existence in late 2010. Other websites have also noted its passing.
But it's worthwhile to take a moment to discuss, in all seriousness, where we are with Risk Information, Risk Management, "Equivalent QC", and the CLIA Final Rules. How did we get here? What drove us to this state? Where are we going next?
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Westgard QC is proud to announce 2 new public workshops to be held this year:
Both workshops will be held at the DoubleTree Hotel in Madison, Wisconsin.
For more than a decade, the Westgard Workshops have provided in-depth training that can't be found at other conferences. If you want to be more than an anonymous seat in a cavernous hall... If you want to learn whether or not the latest management fad has any real applications in laboratories... If you want honest assessments instead of equivocal statements... If you care more about practical tools than precious theory... You need to attend the Westgard Workshops.
More details on the workshops after the jump...
-----Posted by James O. Westgard, Sten A. Westgard
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Now that we know EQC will officially be phased out and instead Labs will have to develop QC Plans through Risk Analysis (as explained in CLSI's new guideline EP23A), some of the waiting is over. EQC, which was fatally flawed from the start, is going to go away.
However, the exact regulations about QC Plans and Risk Analysis have yet to be written (or, at least, are not yet known by the general public). What makes this more uncertain is that EP23A is only meant as a guideline, and the Risk Analysis approach discussed in the guideline is only meant as a possible example. Risk Analysis is a long-established technique (outside the medical laboratory) and has many different formats and levels of complexity. Even between EP18 and EP23, there are discrepancies between the Risk Analysis recommendations (EP18 recommends a 4-category ranking of risk, while EP23 recommends a 5-category approach).
So while we're waiting for the other shoe to drop (in the form of detailed regulations and accreditation guidelines governing Risk Analysis), we might as well talk about what questions those rules will have to answer...
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
So we all know that Risk Analysis is coming to laboratories in the US. (click here if this is news to you). But Risk Analysis, particularly the FMEA technique (Failure Mode and Effects Analysis), is not new to healthcare. Outside the laboratory, plenty of healthcare practitioners have been performing FMEA.
So what do they think about this technique? Try and guess which one of these responses is from a someone in healthcare:
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
As we wait for more details about EP23 and how CMS and CLIA will actually enforce the implementation of Risk QC, the latest morsels to emerge are quite tantalizing.
On the CLSI website, a Q&A has been posted. Here is one interesting bit:
"3. Is there a planned format for documenting the EP23 QCP to present to surveyors?
There is no specific format that is required for the presentation of a QCP. The example in EP23 and those currently being drafted for future education will present some options, but laboratory directors have flexibility in the formatting of their QCPs. There may be some elements, components, or data that the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) will look for when assessing compliance, but nothing standard."
This is an interesting question and an even more intriguing answer. The new standard will have "nothing standard" about its implementation. Presumably labs that use the workbooks sold by CLSI will be able to fulfill any requirements for proper design of Individual QC Plans.
So why won't there be a standard QC Plan format?
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Dr. Westgard had the pleasure of taking part in the Bio-Rad industry workshop on July 17th, which was focused on Quality Control for the Future - Risk Management EP23 for Laboratories.
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
There was some very interesting testimony given in front of the US Congress this week. Boeing and other FAA officials discussed their failure to adequately test the lithium-ion batteries found in the 787 Dreamliner. As you probably already know, on two of the Dreamliners, those batteries malfunctioned and caused fires, which then caused the entire fleet to be grounded.
In the New York Times, it was reported "Boeing’s chief engineer on the 787, Mike Sinnett, said the calculation that a battery would fail only once every 10 million flight hours applied to the design of the battery and did not include possible manufacturing flaws."
In fact, two battery failures and serious fires occurred after less than 52,000 flight hours. The risk was actually over 350 times higher than their estimate!
How could they be so wrong? More after the jump...
-----Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
The biggest news coming out of the AACC/ASCLS conference in Houston was made by Judy Yost of CMS.
So the new future is IQCP. Remember what that stands for?
On August 16th of this year, CMS issued a new memo about IQCPs. If you recall, IQCP stands for Individualized Quality Control Plan, and it's part of the new Risk QC being proposed by CMS as a replacement for EQC. The CLSI guideline EP23, which came out about two years ago, laid out the broad outlines of this new policy, but we have been waiting for the government regulations to spell out the specifics of implementation and interpretation.
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Posted by Sten Westgard, MS
Laboratories in the US probably already know this: their healthcare institutions are getting hit with fines from CMS due to excessive 30-day readmission rates for three conditions:
CMS is imposing increasing fines for hospitals that have excessive readmissions. Guess how many hospitals have been fined - and how much money they've had to pay back...
-----By Sten Westgard, MS