Michael has a post-graduate degree from the University of Toronto, School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and been an Environmental Microbiologist for more than 46 years, as a research scientist and Laboratory Director in both the public and private sector. He currently operates as the President Read more
Method validation and method verification are two distinct procedures required to comply with ISO/IEC Standard 17025:2005 for a microbiology laboratory accreditation. Unfortunately the two terms are often used interchangeably with serious consequences. Without a clear understanding of the different analytical approaches for verification and validation, laboratories often end up doing more unnecessary, costly work, with little benefit. Very often the inappropriate analytical strategy used is unacceptable to meet the requirements for accreditation and the effort needs to be repeated. Learn to do it right the 1st time! The Webinar will discuss the distinction between and requirements for method validation and method verification, to comply with ISO/IEC Standard 17025:2005 for laboratory accreditation in food/water microbiology. Quantitative and Qualitative methods have different performance measurement requirements and require different statistical analyses. Although method validation and method verification are related terms, they have very different analytical and statistical requirements particularly for compliance with ISO/IEC 17025:2005. Understanding these differences is essential for developing appropriate strategies for assessing a method’s fitness for purpose. This webinar will not only address the semantics, but will also discuss the appropriate analytical and statistical approaches to achieving successful verification and validation studies.
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