Sunday, May 9, 2010

Introduction to ISO 9001 Standard Certification

Introduction to ISO 9001 Standard Certification

Certification is a way to attest, by the intermediary of a third-party certifier, to a company’s ability to provide a service, product or system in accordance with client requirements and regulation requirements. ISO and IEC give the following definition:
Procedure by which a third party gives written assurancethat a product, process or service complies with the requirementsspecified in a benchmark.The ISO 9000 family of standards corresponds to all the management best practices benchmarks as regards quality, which are defined by ISO (the International Organisation for Standardization).
ISO 9000 standards were originally written in 1987, with revisions taking place in 1994 and 2000. Thus, the 2000 version of the ISO 9001 standard, which is part of the ISO 9000 family, is written “ISO 9001:2000?. The ISO 9001:2000 standard mainly focuses on the processes used to produce a service or product, whereas the ISO 9001:1994 standard was mainly focused on the product itself. Here is an overview of all the different standards in the ISO 9000 family:
ISO 9000: “Quality Management Systems – Basic Principles and Vocabulary”. The ISO 9000 standard describes the principles of a quality management system and defines the terminologyISO 9001: “Quality Management Systems – Requirements”. The
ISO 9001 standard describes the requirements relative to a quality management system either for internal use or for contractual or certification purposes. Therefore, this standard is a group of requirements that companies must followISO 9004: “Quality Management Systems – Guidelines for Improving Performance”. This standard, which is intended for internal use and not for contractual purposes, focuses particularly on continually improving performanceISO 10011: “Guidelines for auditing quality management and/or environmental management systems”.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

ISO 9000 Process Based Auditing

ISO 9000 Process Based Auditing

Any effective quality management system (including the subsystems) works as a control process, which has the ability to detect deviations and nonconforming products and assures that the corrective and preventive action measures are effective. The regulatory auditor should check that all subsystems and processes of the quality management system are structured as self-regulating control processes. For example Deming’s PDCA cycle demonstrates such a process with the following components:

i) Plan – Has the manufacturer established the objectives and processes to enable the quality system to deliver the results in accordance with the regulatory requirements?

ii) Do – Has the manufacturer implemented the quality system and the processes?

iii) Check – Has the manufacturer checked process monitoring and measurement results against the objectives and the regulatory requirements? Does the manufacturer evaluate the effectiveness of the quality system periodically through internal audits and management reviews?

iv) Act – Has the manufacturer implemented effective corrective and preventive actions? Confirm that the company is committed to providing high quality safe and effective medical devices, and that the company is conforming with applicable laws and regulations.