Publications by authors named "Oswald Sonntag"

Calibration of an analytical measurement procedure is an important basis for the reliability of patient results. Many publications and as well as procedures on how to estimate quality control and interpret those results have been become available over the years. In this publication we are focusing on the critical part of the calibration as there are no clear communication or guidelines on how to perform it.

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As testing for infectious diseases moves from manual, biological testing such as complement fixation to high throughput automated autoanalyzer, the methods for controlling these assays have also changed to reflect those used in clinical chemistry. However, there are many differences between infectious disease serology and clinical chemistry testing, and these differences have not been considered when applying traditional quality control methods to serology. Infectious disease serology, which is highly regulated, detects antibodies of varying classes and to multiple and different antigens that change according to the organisms' genotype/serotype and stage of disease.

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In April of 2011, Bio-Rad Laboratories Quality System Division (Irvine, CA, USA) hosted its third annual convocation of experts on laboratory quality in the city of Salzburg, Austria. As in the past 2 years, over 60 experts from across Europe, Israel, USA and South Africa convened to discuss contemporary issues and topics of importance to the clinical laboratory. This year's conference had EN/ISO 15189 and accreditation as the common thread for most discussions, with topics ranging from how to meet requirements like uncertainty to knowledge gained from those already accredited.

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Background: Data on quality indicators (QIs) should be collected over time in order to identify and continuously monitor clinical laboratory performance and to improve patient safety by identifying and implementing effective interventions. The aim of the present study was to ascertain whether the utilization of a set of quality indicators over a 3-year period resulted in an improvement in the efficiency and effectiveness of an individual laboratory.

Methods: Over a 3-year time interval (2009-2011), a series of 38 QIs covering all stages of the total testing process (21 in the pre-analytic, nine in the analytic and eight in the post-analytic phase) was monitored.

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In today's health care system the prevalence of medical errors is high as stated by the report of the Institute of Medicine. A varying error rate of <10% in clinical medical laboratories has been reported in the literature. Most of these errors occur in the pre-analytical phase.

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The VITROS 5,1 FS analytical system was evaluated. The measurement of the serum proteins and HDL cholesterol with the newly developed MicroTip technology was compared with other nephelometric and turbidimetric methods. The within-run imprecision for apolipoprotein A1, apolipoprotein B, complement 3, complement 4, transferrin, immunoglobulin A, immunoglobulin M, immunoglobulin G and HDL cholesterol showed coefficients of variation between 0.

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