Statistical Process Control Training
About This Course
Are you data rich but information poor? Our pharmaceutical statistics training course provides you with the essential understanding of several fundamental statistical process control (SPC) tools for analyzing data. This training will enable you to understand what the output from these tools is telling you about your product or process. This, in turn, will give you powerful information that you can use to provide continuous trending and to drive quality improvement.
The pharmaceutical industry has historically underutilized SPC techniques that have been used extensively in many other industries to drive product and process improvement. Even today, the pharmaceutical industry could still be characterized as being data rich but information poor.
Current EU and US GMP process validation guidance (such as EU GMP Annex 15, ICH Q10 and US guidance on process validation) emphasizes the need for ongoing/continued process verification by the trending of data. The well-established SPC techniques are perfect for meeting this expectation.
Performing the necessary statistical calculations is now relatively simple with a variety of software packages available to do the number crunching. However, to obtain the maximum benefit from the use of these sophisticated statistical software tools, it is vital that the outputs are correctly interpreted.
This course is approved by the Royal Society of Chemistry as suitable for its members’ continuing professional development (CPD).
Key Learning Objectives
On completion of this course, delegates will know and understand:
- How to visualize data
- The concept of statistical confidence
- The common statistical process control tools (such as control charts, process capability and linear regression) that enable ongoing process verification
- How to use statistical software and interpret the outputs
- Where these simple tools and techniques can be used to add value, e.g. to provide ongoing/continued process verification, in product quality reviews, etc.
- Case studies from pioneers who are already successfully using these tools
Course Outline
Summarizing and Visualizing Data
- How to present and compare data in ways that make understanding easier
Confidence in Your Means and Proportions
- The importance of calculating confidence intervals, not just means
Control Charts
- How to draw and understand the most common SPC tool for trending data
CUSUM Charts
- The control chart that magnifies gradual trends
Fishbone Diagrams and Pareto Charts
- Simple tools for performing cause and effect analysis
Process Capability
- How to determine if a process is capable of consistently meeting pre-defined specifications
Regression Analysis
- How to analyze stability data