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Five Foundational Steps of a CAPA Quality Process

A well-defined CAPA program is a framework for quality and effectiveness

Credit: CDC on Unsplash

Etienne Nichols
Mon, 04/10/2023 - 00:02
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I have a bold opinion: The corrective and preventive action (CAPA) process is the second-most important component of your quality management system (QMS). (If you want to know what I think is No. 1, shoot me an email.) As you build medical devices, a well-defined CAPA program provides a framework for quality and effectiveness, whether in product, process, or people. That’s why getting the CAPA quality fundamentals right is so important.

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Let’s take a look at the five foundational steps of the CAPA quality process.

1. Identify potential CAPA quality cases
CAPA is the heart of your QMS and indicates its overall health. So, monitoring the inputs to the CAPA process is essential to ensure you’re promptly identifying any potential quality issues. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) agrees because 21 CFR 820 includes a requirement for manufacturers to have processes to analyze input data.

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Comments

Submitted by Michael McLean on Mon, 04/10/2023 - 18:43

CAPA

Etienne,

I see where you love "teaching how systems work together". So on that and "CAPA", they are defined differently and have different 'steps' therefore it should be CA and PA as in Management Systems and Industry standards. Yes they do and should "work together" but are not together.

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