Abstrakt: |
Quality management of laboratory medicine has become a hot topic at many conferences. Also, many national and international organizations have created working groups and committees with the task of working out standards, guidelines or recommendations for quality management of medical laboratories. We have observed that there is a great deal of interest not only from professional and scientific organizations directly involved in medical laboratory tests, but also from accreditation and certification bodies, from test laboratories in general, from in vitro diagnostic devices (IVD) manufacturers and their associations, and from other medical laboratory suppliers. However, we found that all these parties were discussing from their own point of view, without taking into account the position of other involved partners and that there was a need for creating a discussion forum for quality management in clinical laboratories. So in 1995, we started the Antwerp conferences on quality (r)evolution in clinical laboratories. The aim was to bring together all concerned partners and to establish a forum for brainstorming, independently of any pressure group. The leitmotif for the Antwerp conferences (Fig. 1) is a chain model showing the interfaces and relationships between all the partners involved in laboratory tests. During the conferences, this chain model has been examined from different angles and a summary of the concepts evolving from the discussions can be found in the conference abstracts and conference review reports in this journal. A Selection of ideas emerging from these conferences are presented below. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |