Repeatability and reproducibility in med labs: A procedure to measurement system analysis

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Abstract

Measured data variation is crucial in medical measurements as it may affect the diagnosis and hence the treatment. This study introduces a procedure for measurement assessment in medical laboratories. The authors employ different quality measures such as the signal-to-noise, discrimination and precision-to-tolerance ratios to evaluate a measurement system of different gages. The different quality criteria will be mapped into one quality diagram that informs about the adequacy of a measurement system. A gage repeatability and reproducibility study in conjunction with analysis of variance analysis are employed. The authors also introduce a health quality characteristic index (HQCI) as a standard indicator of health status according to a given health characteristic. The established procedure, diagrams and HQCI guidelines could remarkably chart the accuracy of measurements and the precision of the used gages on blood pressure data conducted in a clinic. The presented guidelines can be potentially valuable for the assessment measurement with minimal statistical knowledge.

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Dalalah, D., & Diabat, A. (2015). Repeatability and reproducibility in med labs: A procedure to measurement system analysis. IET Science, Measurement and Technology, 9(7), 826–835. https://doi.org/10.1049/iet-smt.2014.0363

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