Lessons from External Quality Control in Laboratory Medicine: Important Implications for Public Health!
Topic editors:
Prof. Klaus-Peter Hunfeld, Prof. Han sotto Reiber, Prof. Piet Meijer, Prof. Peter Luppa, Prof. Dirk Schluter, Prof. Michael Spannagl, Prof. Douglas Norris, and Prof. lngo Schellenberg
Data on the impact of laboratory testing quality on public health and patient care are scarce, despite billions of tests worth trillions of dollars being performed annually worldwide. Medical testing remains largely underregulated, with quality control measures often provided by manufacturers, leaving many tests unevaluated by robust clinical studies.
External quality control measures, such as round robin trials and surveys, are crucial for assessing modern assay quality. Greater understanding of in vitro diagnostics and issues related to test quality in laboratory medicine is needed, along with the impact of these issues on medical care and public health.
This Research Topic highlights lessons from INSTAND. e.V., Duesseldorf, an independent scientific society focused on external quality control in laboratory medicine over the past 20 years. It addresses regulatory issues in molecular diagnostics and the identification of
diagnostic and therapeutic tools for clinical use. This collection aims to shed light on problems with insufficiently evaluated test systems and their impact on medical care and public health.
Findings from the included studies will enhance our understanding of how test quality affects patient care both individually and broadly, ultimately aiming to improve future medical care and high-quality patient management.
For any questions, please contact us at instand@instand-ev.de