This Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) training will be valuable to CLIA regulated non-waived laboratories that run automated analyzers or semi-quantitative kit tests.
CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments) has updated its requirements for QC and QA. CLIA has replaced the term Quality Assurance with the term Quality Assessment the new guidelines regarding QA specifically stress measuring quality through all aspects of the testing process. This includes pre-analytical, analytical, and post-analytical parts of the process as a whole. QA is now focused on measuring outcomes and developing actions based on findings. The Quality Control process has guidelines in place for all three levels of testing; Waived, Moderately Complex and High Complexity. We will explore the differences and the proper methods to meet the guidelines.
Areas Covered in the seminar:
- Quality Assurance vs. Quality Assessment: Why the Change?
- The Three Phases of Testing.
- Quality Assessment Systems That Work.
- Quality Control: Principles and Practice.
- QC for Waived Testing: Is Minimum Enough?
- QC Formulas and Their Use.
Who will benefit:
This webinar will be valuable to CLIA regulated non-waived laboratories that run automated analyzers or semi-quantitative kit tests.All automated non-waived systems fall under these regulations. Employees who would benefit include:
- Chemistry and special chemistry supervisors and techs.
- Hematology and coagulation supervisors and techs.
- Blood bank supervisors and techs.
- Microbiology (automated) supervisors and techs
Instructor Profile:
Barry Craig, Owner and CEO of Laboratory Consulting, LLC. I have 20 years experience in laboratory management with a concentration on physician office labs. I was the POL & Clinic Coordinator for a major Birmingham Health System until 01/01/10. I managed 22, COLA accredited POL’s, half waived, half non-waived. I write the “Ask the Expert” column in Physician Office Resource magazine answering lab related questions monthly. I also have been published in ADVANCE for Administrators of the Laboratory magazine. I taught a class on Lab Consulting at the COLA symposium in Sept, 2009.