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Charts of operational process specifications ("OPSpecs charts") for assessing the precision, accuracy, and quality control needed to satisfy proficiency testing performance criteria

84

Citations

0

References

1992

Year

TLDR

The study derives operational process specifications from an analytical quality‑planning model to determine the precision, accuracy, and QC requirements for meeting proficiency testing criteria. OPSpecs charts graphically display operational limits for imprecision and inaccuracy, enabling users to plot a measurement procedure’s operating point and compare it with candidate QC procedures to select an appropriate QC strategy, with normalized charts facilitating general assessment across procedures. The charts show that a QC procedure whose limits exceed a measurement procedure’s operating point guarantees, with a specified probability, detection of critical analytical errors.

Abstract

"Operational process specifications" have been derived from an analytical quality-planning model to assess the precision, accuracy, and quality control (QC) needed to satisfy Proficiency Testing (PT) criteria. These routine operating specifications are presented in the form of an "OPSpecs chart," which describes the operational limits for imprecision and inaccuracy when a desired level of quality assurance is provided by a specific QC procedure. OPSpecs charts can be used to compare the operational limits for different QC procedures and to select a QC procedure that is appropriate for the precision and accuracy of a specific measurement procedure. To select a QC procedure, one plots the inaccuracy and imprecision observed for a measurement procedure on the OPSpecs chart to define the current operating point, which is then compared with the operational limits of candidate QC procedures. Any QC procedure whose operational limits are greater than the measurement procedure's operating point will provide a known assurance, with the percent chance specified by the OPSpecs chart, that critical analytical errors will be detected. OPSpecs charts for a 10% PT criterion are presented to illustrate the selection of QC procedures for measurement procedures with different amounts of imprecision and inaccuracy. Normalized OPSpecs charts are presented to permit a more general assessment of the analytical performance required with commonly used QC procedures.