Safety Risk Management for Medical Devices


Book Description

Safety Risk Management for Medical Devices, Second Edition teaches the essential safety risk management methodologies for medical devices compliant with the requirements of ISO 14971:2019. Focusing exclusively on safety risk assessment practices required in the MedTech sector, the book outlines sensible, easily comprehensible, state-of the-art methodologies that are rooted in current industry best practices, addressing safety risk management of medical devices, thus making it useful for those in the MedTech sector who are responsible for safety risk management or need to understand risk management, including design engineers, product engineers, development engineers, software engineers, Quality assurance and regulatory affairs. Graduate-level engineering students with an interest in medical devices will also benefit from this book. The new edition has been fully updated to reflect the state-of-the-art in this fast changing field. It offers guidance on developing and commercializing medical devices in line with the most current international standards and regulations. - Includes new coverage of ISO 14971:2019, ISO/TR 24971 - Presents the latest information on the history of risk management, lifetime of a medical device, risk management review, production and post production activities, post market risk management - Provides practical, easy-to-understand and state-of the-art methodologies that meet the requirements of international regulation




Mastering Safety Risk Management for Medical and In Vitro Devices


Book Description

When it comes to medical and in vitro devices, risk management starts with a design assurance process that helps practitioners identify, understand, analyze, and mitigate the risks of the healthcare product design for favorable benefit-risk assessment. Risk management actively follows the product’s life cycle into production and post-market phases. This book offers a blueprint for implementing an effective risk management system. It provides risk management tools and a compliance framework for methods in conformance to ISO 13485:2016, ISO 14971:2019, European Union MDR, IVDR, and US FDA regulations (including the new FDA QMSR).




Medical Devices. Application of Risk Management to Medical Devices


Book Description

Medical equipment, Medical instruments, Risk assessment, Risk analysis, Management, Hazards, Clinical investigation instruments, Safety measures




Medical Device Regulations


Book Description

The term 'medical devices' covers a wide range of equipment essential for patient care at every level of the health service, whether at the bedside, at a health clinic or in a large specialised hospital. Yet many countries lack access to high-quality devices, particularly in developing countries where health technology assessments are rare and there is a lack of regulatory controls to prevent the use of substandard devices. This publication provides a guidance framework for countries wishing to create or modify their own regulatory systems for medical devices, based on best practice experience in other countries. Issues highlighted include: the need for harmonised regulations; and the adoption, where appropriate, of device approvals of advanced regulatory systems to avoid an unnecessary drain on scarce resources. These approaches allow emphasis to be placed on locally-assessed needs, including vendor and device registration, training and surveillance and information exchange systems.




Safety of Electromedical Devices


Book Description

Preface Development in the feld of medical technology has resulted in a manifold of medical devices enabling us to diagnose illnesses more reliably, treat them more effciently and compensate for handicaps more effectively. However, these improvements are also - sociated with safety risks. Today, patients are in contact with an increasing number of medical devices longer and more intensively then before. Applied parts are put into contact with the body, probes may be introduced into the body via natural or surgical orifces, and even whole devices may be implanted for many years. The application of devices is no longer restricted to medical locations only. Home use by lay people is increasing and involves even critical devices such as for dialysis, nerve and muscle stimulation and ventilation. In contrast to users’ patients are in a special situation. Their life could depend on the performance of a device, they might be unconscious, may have impaired reactions, or have been made insensitive to pain by medication, and hence they may be exposed to hazards without their awareness and protection by their own reaction. Therefore, medical devices must meet particularly stringent safety requirements. However, the question arises how safe is safe enough? The readiness to accept risks depends on a variety of accompanying circumstances. In fact, subjective risk p- ception varies among individuals and differs from country to country, and frequently only in rare cases it is in agreement with assessments of objective scientifc ana- ses.







Principles of Risk Management and Patient Safety


Book Description

Principles of Risk Management and Patient Safety identifies changes in the industry and describes how these changes have influenced the functions of risk management in all aspects of healthcare. The book is divided into four sections. The first section describes the current state of the healthcare industry and looks at the importance of risk management and the emergence of patient safety. It also explores the importance of working with other sectors of the health care industry such as the pharmaceutical and device manufacturers. Important Notice: The digital edition of this book is missing some of the images or content found in the physical edition.




Quality Risk Management in the FDA-Regulated Industry


Book Description

The purpose of this new edition is to offer an updated view of the risk management field as it applies to medical products. Since the publication of the first edition (2012), the emphasis on risk-based processes has growth exponentially across all sectors, and risk management is now considered as significant as quality management. ISO 9001 was revised and now requires that top management promote the use of risk-based thinking. ISO 13485:2016, which specifies the requirements for a quality management system specific to the medical devices industry, also now shows a greater emphasis on risk management and risk-based decision making. In addition, the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) is the most important reform of U.S. food safety laws in more than 70 years. This indispensable book presents a systematic and comprehensive approach to quality risk management. It will assist medical and food product manufacturers with the integration of a risk management system or risk management principles and activities into their existing quality management system by providing practical explanations and examples. The appropriate use of quality risk management can facilitate compliance with regulatory requirements such as good manufacturing practice or good laboratory practice. All chapters have been updated and revised, and a new chapter has been added to discuss some of the most common pitfalls and misunderstandings regarding risk management, specifically those related to the use of FMEA as the only element of risk management programs. One of the appendices includes 12 case studies, and the companion CD-ROM contains dozens of U.S. FDA and European guidance documents as well as international harmonization documents (ICH and GHTF-IMDRF) related to risk management activities, as well as a 30-question exam (with answers) on the material discussed in the book.




Integrated Safety and Risk Assessment for Medical Devices and Combination Products


Book Description

While the safety assessment (“biocompatibility”) of medical devices has been focused on issues of local tissue tolerance (irritation, sensitization, cytotoxicity) and selected quantal effects (genotoxicity and acute lethality) since first being regulated in the late 1950s, this has changed as devices assumed a much more important role in healthcare and became more complex in both composition and in their design and operation. Add to this that devices now frequently serve as delivery systems for drugs, and that drugs may be combined with devices to improve device performance, and the problems of ensuring patient safety with devices has become significantly more complex. A part of this, requirements for ensuring safety (once based on use of previously acceptable materials – largely polymers and metals) have come to requiring determining which chemical entities are potentially released from a device into patients (and how much is released). Then an appropriate and relevant (yet also conservative) risk assessment must be performed for each identified chemical structure. The challenges inherent in meeting the current requirements are multifold, and this text seeks to identify, understand, and solve all of them. • Identify and verify the most appropriate available data. • As in most cases such data is for a different route of exposure, transform it for use in assessing exposure by the route of interest. • As the duration (and rate) of exposure to moieties released from a device are most frequently different (longer) than what available data speaks to, transformation across tissue is required. • As innate and adaptive immune responses are a central part of device/patient interaction, assessing potential risks on this basis are required. • Incorporating assessments for special populations such as neonates. • Use of (Q)SAR (Quantitative Structure Activity Relationships) modeling in assessments. • Performance and presentation of integrative assessments covering all potential biologic risks. Appendices will contain summarized available biocompatibility data for commonly used device materials (polymers and metals) and safety assessments on the frequently seen moieties in extractions from devices.




Risk Management of Medical Devices for Healthcare Organisations


Book Description

Covers designing and structuring a surveillance system to monitor medical devices Reviews current and future techniques to oversee, track, and assess medical devices within a healthcare organization Covers designing and structuring a surveillance system to monitor medical devices in order to help you comply with reforms on post market device surveillance Discusses all aspects of risk management in medical device development from ideation to application Risk Management of Medical Devices for Healthcare Organizations will help you identify what risks exist with medical devices in the context of a healthcare organization. The contents include coverage of how firms currently manage such risks (active vs. passive device surveillance), the strengths and limitations of those methods and what new directions the industry is heading to in order to optimize risk management. James McCauley has developed this book with a global audience in mind, and has prepared a comprehensive table of contents covering all aspects of risk management. This book is ideal for anyone at management level who needs to implement a risk management system for medical devices within a healthcare organization. McCauley includes information about automated reporting and analysis systems such as FAERS and DELTA systems, plus coverage of the medical device identification system US UDI. If you are researching and developing methods to survey and assess medical device safety and performance, this book will help you to generate a sound foundation in current methods for risk management of medical devices to pioneer new research. For clinical engineers, this book will help you to prevent and resolve equipment failure and any potential complications. About the author James McCauley Manager, Clinical Technology Services, Central Coast Local Health District Biomedical Engineer at Open Heart International Managing Director, M Engineering Australia Pty Ltd, trading as James McCauley & Associates

James McCauley has over 30 years of experience working in healthcare and biomedical engineering, specifically with a clinical engineering focus. At Open Heart International he supports open heart surgical teams on outreach missions and other medical specialties in developing countries. As a manager at Clinical Technology Services he is responsible for the implementation of Point of Care IVD’s, including evaluation and clinical assessment. He is also the current chairman for Biomedical Engineering Management Group NSW. James consultants for various commercial clients including Seventh Day Adventist Hospital, Medtek Pty Ltd, and the Commonwealth of Australia, represented by the Therapeutic Goods Administration. Until 2012 he was the Head of Biomedical Engineering at Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, where he was responsible for research into and development of medical devices. He is currently the chair of the Biomedical Engineering Management Group NSW (BMEG) which represents the NSW Government, the NSW Public Health System and all 135 public hospitals in NSW.