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The two sides of the audit experience: Auditee and Auditor

The two sides of the audit experience: Auditee and Auditor. Kate Noble Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering University of New South Wales TechTrain 2004. This presentation aims to:. Reveal audits as valuable, objective learning tools. Reveal that audits are impersonal.

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The two sides of the audit experience: Auditee and Auditor

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  1. The two sides of the audit experience: Auditee and Auditor Kate Noble Graduate School of Biomedical Engineering University of New South Wales TechTrain 2004

  2. This presentation aims to: • Reveal audits as valuable, objective learning tools. • Reveal that audits are impersonal. • Highlight the need to write it down!

  3. What is an audit?

  4. An audit is … • A check that you are doing what you said you’d do • A check that it’s appropriate for what you want to achieve • A check of the quality and integrity of the output

  5. Why do we have audits? • For compliance with regulations • To monitor outcomes (GMP,GLP) • For certification and re-certification • To review a system for currency, appropriateness and effectiveness

  6. My auditee experience …

  7. In the beginning … • 1995 - 2000 GSBME collaborated with a private research company • Audited for ‘GLP’ ie Code of Federal Regulations (Title 21), Part 58 Good Laboratory Practice for Non-clinical laboratory Studies (or 21CFR58)

  8. The work • Writing the Protocol and SOPs • Preparation of materials and inclusion into test systems • Maintenance of the test systems • Retrieval of materials from the test systems • Various analyses of the materials • Maintenance of data bases, daybooks and the numerous, requisite tracking forms

  9. Along came ‘Margot’ … (not her real name) As a requirement for future applications to the FDA. She had read all of our documentation and asked a lot of questions • of those responsible for the projects • of those responsible for maintaining the system • of those who carried out the work – (primarily me) It was like an inquisition!

  10. The Inquisition - eg • SOPs • Vernier calipers • Data security • File transfer • Data crosschecks

  11. The Inquisition • Revealed tiny gaps • EVERY audit:- numerous corrective actions and revealed the need for more SOPs each time. • SOPs are controlled documents which need be reviewed and ratified with controlled issue • Any new SOP meant A LOT OF EXTRA WORK! • Already had over 30 SOPs for these projects. We thought we’d been thorough!

  12. We dreaded the thought of ‘Margot’ .

  13. Dreaded ‘Margot’ • It was difficult not to take her questions and comments personally! • Felt stupid or negligent • Often felt inadequate. • Felt my work was being personally attacked by some outsider • Felt resentful. • Felt demoralized

  14. Mental Change as an auditee • .

  15. And now, me,the auditor!….

  16. Me, the OHS auditor ?!! • Completed an accredited OHSMS auditor course as part of an OHS degree • Recruited to assist with UNSW OHS internal audits (for WorkCover self-insurer purposes) • Conducted one audit per month at schools around campus on a single aspect of the UNSW OHSMS

  17. Auditor training What is an OHSMS????? • A linked series of OHS documentation • A framework that holds all your OHS procedures together and drives it • How you identify, assess and control the risks

  18. Auditor training • Need guidelines for the what the system is to include – auditee and auditor • System must be documented - look for documentation • Prove system exists - Interview employees, documentation • Don’t suggest how to handle non-conformances

  19. Yet another mental changeneeded! • From RA, at the bottom of the pile, to ‘interrogating’ Professors! • From auditee to auditor! • From QA to OHS But I didn’t want to be another ‘Margot’!

  20. Particularly during the pre-audit briefing, I have come up against Resentment Hostility Frustration Suspicion Inertia Anger Mistrust My experiences

  21. My approach • I anticipated initial negativity • Peoples’ initial responses indicate whether they have had their ‘mental change’ • I like to know that the auditee understands the objectives of the audit before I begin

  22. Daybook notes Minutes SOPs, Reports Training records Orders/Receipts Correspondence My approach Encouragement & reinforcement • You’re probably doing most of it anyway. • WRITE IT DOWN! If it’s not written down then you can’t prove it happened! • Document, implement, prove it Examples of evidence you might use:

  23. My approach • While OHS is a legal requirement, businesses are more successful (time, money, output) where there is an active and effective management system in place

  24. My approach • Document what you are already doing then add the bits that are missing • Tailor to your own workplace • Ensure that the system is used • I give examples of how others have dealt with similar non-conformances

  25. In conclusion … • An audit is a useful tool for looking at your SYSTEM of doing things. Do you have a system? Is it written down? Is it implemented (with evidence)? What drives your system? • Any non-conformance indicates a problem with the SYSTEM

  26. In conclusion … • Audits raise awareness of what is needed • An audit is about documentation Write it down!

  27. Time is a great teacher, but unfortunately it kills all its pupils Hector Berlios Thanks to my colleagues at UNSW, the research company, and also to ‘Margot’, for the opportunity to learn from these experiences.

  28. Thank you Do you have any … • Questions? • Comments? • Experiences ? … you’d like to share?

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