Every veterinary laboratory, whether it is a full-service commercial or institutional facility or a practitioner's office laboratory, can benefit from a quality assurance program. A laboratory quality assurance program has one overall objective - to provide confidence in the validity of the laboratory's test results and services. In turn, the laboratory's customers will have increased satisfaction with the quality of veterinary health care.
This volume will outline the general components of quality assurance and will allow for customisation of procedures by individual laboratories. Sections will discuss quality goals and policies, quality of resources, evaluating new procedures, quality of operations, and quality considerations for point-of-care testing and office laboratories.
Preface.
1. Introduction.
2. Quality Goals.
3. Mathematical Concepts for Quality Assurance.
4. Monitoring for Quality.
5. Quality of Operations, Policies, and Resources.
6. Evaluating Laboratory Procedures.
7. Laboratory Choices and Point-of-Care Testing.
Appendix 1: Veterinary Quality Assurance Programs.
Appendix 2: Conversion of Units.
Glossary.
References.
Index.
James E. C. Bellamy and Dennis W. Olexson are the authors of Quality Assurance Handbook for Veterinary Laboratories, published by Wiley.Quality assurance programs have been imposed on human health laboratories in the United States through regulation, but veterinary laboratories as yet remain unregulated. Heightened awareness of the importance of quality assurance has prompted many veterinary laboratories to adopt quality assurance measures. The Quality Assurance Handbook for Veterinary Laboratories, written by experts with substantial practical experience, is a tl3Ê