View {title}

Quality: Law, practice and common hurdles

The best project plan does not help when the quality of the study and the data is poor. Since quality is an essential aspect for the success of a research project, this session will inform you about the legal basis of quality aspects and give examples on how to keep the quality of your projects high. After a short presentation, there will be plenty of time for questions from you as researchers.

This seminar session is part of a lunch seminar series, which offers brief overviews and room for questions on important topics related to observational studies (HRO projects). Find out more about the whole seminar series "Facts and pitfalls for observational studies - how to plan and conduct HRO projects" by following the link below.

About this session

In this seminar session, you will learn about «quality in a nutshell». We will start with the respective law and then give practical tips and examples on how to keep the quality of your project high.

Find out more about the whole seminar series here: Facts and pitfalls for observational studies - How to plan and conduct HRO projects.

Content and speakers:

Content:

  • Quality requirements for HRO projects in the legislation
  • Risk-based quality management
  • Typical pitfalls – experiences from audits
  • Quality management: aspects along the sequence/phases of HRO projects affecting quality
  • Possibilities for quality control

Speakers:

  • Claudia Fila, Head GCP Training, Unit: Training & Education, CTC Zürich, USZ
  • Clara Landwehr Lardelli, Project Manager, Unit: Data-driven Research Services, CTC Zürich, USZ
Who should attend:

Researchers with planned, ongoing, or completed HRO projects (observational studies), who have questions about project quality.

When:

Wednesday, 29 May 2024, 12h00 – 13h00

Presentations / Video

Download the presentation and video from this session

Before you download this document, we would appreciate you letting us know who you are.

Our templates and tools are free. As a publicly funded organisation, we strive to inform the public about the impact of our work and to continually improve our services. We therefore kindly ask you to leave us your email address so we can contact you with a short one-time survey. You may download the document without providing your personal data.