An Educational Web-Based External Quality Assessment Outcome and Evaluation: First Experiences with Urinary Sediment and Hemostaseology

2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (09+10/2013) ◽  
Author(s):  
Cornelia-C. Schürer-Maly ◽  
William Wood ◽  
Rosanna Falbo ◽  
Paolo Brambilla ◽  
Christian Heller ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Sandra Secchiero ◽  
Giovanni B. Fogazzi ◽  
Fabio Manoni ◽  
MariaGrazia Epifani ◽  
Mario Plebani

AbstractObjectivesIn spite of the introduction of automated systems for urinary sediment analysis, microscopy examination remains the gold standard, and it is more than ever important to perform it with a good and reliable quality. External Quality Assessment (EQA) programs on urinary sediment are rare. The present paper provides an analysis of results from 2001 to date of the EQA Italian program which involves today 230 laboratories.MethodsThe program includes four surveys per year. Participants are asked the identification and clinical associations of urinary sediment particles, shown as phase contrast microscopy images in the website of the Center of Biomedical Research (CRB) (2 surveys), and the diagnosis of clinical cases presented by both images and a short clinical history (2 surveys). The results of each survey are then scored and commented. In 20 years, 298 images were presented: 90 cells (9 types), 23 lipids (5 types), 87 casts (21 types), 53 crystals (14 types), 22 microorganisms (5 types), and 23 contaminants (9 types). Moreover, 27 clinical cases, covering a wide spectrum of conditions with different degrees of complexity, were presented to participants.ResultsIdentification: among urinary particle categories, the correct identification rate (obtained for each particle from the sum of correct + partially correct answers) was very high for micro-organisms (mean ± SD: 96.2 ± 3.5%), high for lipids (88.0 ± 11.8%) and crystals (87.0 ± 16.5%) followed, in decreasing order, by cells (82.1 ± 15.9%), casts (81.8 ± 14.8%), and contaminants (76.7 ± 22.1%). Clinical associations (n=67): the rate of correct answers was 93.5 ± 5.7% ranging from 75.0 to 100% for all but one clinical association (i.e., acute glomerulonephritis: 55.4%). Clinical cases: throughout surveys, due to the overall rate of particle misidentification, only 59.8 ± 17.1%, (range 32.5–88.7%) of participants achieved access to clinical diagnosis. Of these, 88.7 ± 10.6% (range 59.9–99.3%) were able to indicate the correct diagnosis.ConclusionsOur program can be used as a tool to improve the identification of urine particles and the knowledge of their clinical meaning and to encourage specialists of laboratory medicine to correlate urinary findings with other laboratory data and the clinical history, an aspect that improves the value of the day by day work.


2010 ◽  
Vol 411 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 859-867 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giovanni B. Fogazzi ◽  
Sandra Secchiero ◽  
Dario Consonni ◽  
Laura Sciacovelli ◽  
Lorena Zardo ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 832-837 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuzhu Huang ◽  
Wei Wang ◽  
Haijian Zhao ◽  
Yuxuan Du ◽  
Jiali Liu ◽  
...  

Abstract Background This study aimed to evaluate the ability of comment providers who were responsible for interpreting results in clinical laboratories in China and to improve the quality of interpretative comments. Methods Basic information and interpretative comments for five cases of 1912 routine chemistry External Quality Assessment (EQA) participant laboratories were collected by web-based EQA system in May 2018. EQA organizers assigned scores to each key phrase of comments based on predetermined marking scale and calculated total scores for each participant’s answer. Final scores and ranking were calculated according to scores of cases. Finally, we comprehensively analyzed the type of hospital and the professional title of participants. Results In total, 772 clinical laboratories, 1472 participants, from different Chinese provinces submitted interpretative comments. Median scores, interquartile ranges and score ranges of the five cases were 13 (11–15, 1–20), 13 (10–16, 0–20), 15 (12–17, 0–21), 7 (5–9, −2 to 14) and 12 (10–13, −2 to 18). The final scores and ranking of participants that came from tertiary hospitals were higher than those from secondary and other hospitals; however, there were no significant differences (0.774). When grouped by professional title, we found that although no significant variability existed among senior, intermediate, junior and others (0.699), it existed between laboratory physicians and technicians, as the median final scores of the former were higher than the latter. Conclusions Practice and quality of interpretative comments are indeed different among different laboratories and participants in China. Laboratories should train and assess the interpretative ability of personnel. EQA organizers should also improve the scoring method and establish peer assessors team through this survey.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document