What are the essentials for compliant claims? How do you support and monitor claims in packaging and promotional content? Creating and following internal procedures is a strong defense.
Companies can make mistakes during drug and device development and in the post-marketing maintenance phase, but all too often, organizations apply a temporary solution to the problem and move on. In this article, Helen Lowe at Arriello addresses how Corrective and Preventive Action (CAPA) management provides a better approach to discover the root cause of the problem.
CAPA consistently remains a top reason for FDA’s 483 observations, usually due to inadequate processes or inconsistent adherence to regulatory requirements.
It’s time to consider CAPAs as opportunities rather than just other issues to tackle.
Having a grasp on which actions are necessary at various stages of the CAPA process is critical to a quality program.
Mistake proofing is used in product, process, and service design and development as well as in ongoing operations and improvement applications. The goal with mistake-proofing is to find and correct mistakes, errors, or omissions as close to the source as possible, when the mistakes cost less to correct than if found later.
CAPA Corner: The Case of the Defunct TV
A root cause investigation may be formal or informal. Things happen, at work, at home, anywhere. The investigation methodology remains the same. Only the level of documentation changes to fit the situation.
We now test the possible causes against the facts in the IS / IS NOT Diagram to see which ones make sense. This is where the investments made in defining the problem and getting the facts pay off!
The third step of the investigation is to develop a list of possible causes. All too often investigators stumble at this point as they rely solely on the fish-bone diagram.
In this third of a series of articles on conducting a root cause investigation, we explore a second key investment every investigator should make: assuring you have the facts! Unfortunately, investigators are often under tremendous pressure to complete the investigation and assume the information they have is entirely correct. As a result days, or weeks, are wasted going down the wrong path.