Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology

Abstract Quality assurance is one of the most important aspects of an epidemiological study, as its validity is largely determined by data quality. The mounting success of quality management in the industrial sector caused a rapid spread throughout manufacturing industries and beyond. Yet, little ha...

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Main Authors: Sandra Alba, Masja Straetemans
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-07-01
Series:Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-021-00098-0
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spelling doaj-dd135d97bfab4098827fefc1dab5afa72021-07-18T11:39:35ZengBMCEmerging Themes in Epidemiology1742-76222021-07-011811810.1186/s12982-021-00098-0Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiologySandra Alba0Masja Straetemans1KIT Royal Tropical InstituteKIT Royal Tropical InstituteAbstract Quality assurance is one of the most important aspects of an epidemiological study, as its validity is largely determined by data quality. The mounting success of quality management in the industrial sector caused a rapid spread throughout manufacturing industries and beyond. Yet, little has been published so far on quality assurance in epidemiology. In this article we review three models for quality assurance (Juran, Donabedian and ISO 9000) and showcase how these can be brought together in one intuitive, systematic and flexible approach to quality assurance in epidemiology. The resulting Open Quality approach refers back to the three processes identified by Juran (planning, control and verification). During the planning stage, we propose a subdivision of the study process in a set of steps and a definition of quality attributes corresponding to activities in that step as suggested by the ISO approach. We refer to the Donabedian model to determine the level at which the control/monitoring should take place—structure, processes or outcomes. Along with an overview of the Open Quality approach we propose an Open Quality tool to support the definition of quality attributes, failure modes, preventive strategies, verification activities, and corrective actions, which form the backbone of the Open Quality approach.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-021-00098-0Quality managementQuality assuranceQuality controlJuranDonabedianISO 9000
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra Alba
Masja Straetemans
spellingShingle Sandra Alba
Masja Straetemans
Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
Quality management
Quality assurance
Quality control
Juran
Donabedian
ISO 9000
author_facet Sandra Alba
Masja Straetemans
author_sort Sandra Alba
title Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
title_short Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
title_full Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
title_fullStr Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
title_full_unstemmed Whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: Open Quality approach for epidemiology
title_sort whatever can go wrong, need not go wrong: open quality approach for epidemiology
publisher BMC
series Emerging Themes in Epidemiology
issn 1742-7622
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Quality assurance is one of the most important aspects of an epidemiological study, as its validity is largely determined by data quality. The mounting success of quality management in the industrial sector caused a rapid spread throughout manufacturing industries and beyond. Yet, little has been published so far on quality assurance in epidemiology. In this article we review three models for quality assurance (Juran, Donabedian and ISO 9000) and showcase how these can be brought together in one intuitive, systematic and flexible approach to quality assurance in epidemiology. The resulting Open Quality approach refers back to the three processes identified by Juran (planning, control and verification). During the planning stage, we propose a subdivision of the study process in a set of steps and a definition of quality attributes corresponding to activities in that step as suggested by the ISO approach. We refer to the Donabedian model to determine the level at which the control/monitoring should take place—structure, processes or outcomes. Along with an overview of the Open Quality approach we propose an Open Quality tool to support the definition of quality attributes, failure modes, preventive strategies, verification activities, and corrective actions, which form the backbone of the Open Quality approach.
topic Quality management
Quality assurance
Quality control
Juran
Donabedian
ISO 9000
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12982-021-00098-0
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