ComplianceGrowth

FDA Recalls - Before You Start, and After You Finish - Best Practices and Common Pitfalls

Kelly Thomas
Recording Webinar Available @All Days
Recorded Webinar
  

Description

This course will teach how to establish a roadmap for conducting recalls. The knowledge you gain will sharpen your recall management decisions and strategy. You will learn how to use the F.D.A.'s health risk criteria so you can develop effective recall procedures. One critical aspect of recalls involves the identification of the root cause of the recall and how you could or should prevent that problem from happening again. Your corrective and preventive action program (CAPA) and quality assurance functions require a rigorous approach to prevent a chronic history of recalls. Reiterative recalls lead the F.D.A. to the conclusion that "You don't get it." F.D.A.'s recall authority and program launches you into a project of crisis management.

Your compliance competency becomes a regulatory issue for the F.D.A. if your recall is deemed ineffective. The seminar will cover critical performance targets for conducting an effective recall. You will learn how missteps in the recall process become an expensive problem in terms of money and a sloppy corporate image.

You will take away practical knowledge on how to work with F.D.A. staff during a recall and how you can prepare for inspectional follow-up or regulatory action, and in some cases, a legal action. You will learn that your approach to recalls plays a major role in mitigating direct and indirect damage to your firm's business. A firm with a history of chronic recalls needs to learn how to get out of that downward spiral. Likewise, for established and new firms you will learn how you can reduce the negative impact of a recall with the use of proper planning.

F.D.A. Recall Training Agenda

DAY 01 (10:00 AM - 04:00 PM EDT)

F.D.A.'s Regulatory Authority

  • Recall Regulations
  • Voluntary recall: 21 Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.) Part 7
  • Mandatory recall actions
  • 21 C.F.R. Part 810
  • 21 C.F.R. Part 806

Recall Classification

  • Violation of the law
  • Risk to Health
  • Precedents
  • Exemptions
  • Stock Recovery
  • Product Withdrawal
  • Product Improvement

Recalls and risk to health

  • Risk to health categories
  • Death
  • Serious injury / serious illness
  • Non-reversible / reversible
  • May cause, if it were to recur
  • Remote possibility
  • Health Hazard Evaluation for Recall Classification
  • F.D.A.'s internal evaluation
  • Vulnerable subpopulations
  • Scoring
  • Participants
  • Industry H.H.E. equivalent
  • F.D.A.'s recall database

DAY 02 (10:00 AM - 04:00 PM EDT )

F.D.A.'s Recall Procedures

  • Understanding F.D.A.'s program and implementation
  • F.D.A.'s agency-wide recall procedures
  • The F.D.A.'s investigator's job
  • Preparing a recall strategy
  • Preparing for F.D.A. oversight
  • Recall notification to F.D.A.'s District Office
  • Recall notification to the public
  • Root cause identification
  • Correction and Prevent Action (CAPA)

F.D.A. inspectional follow up

Enforcement: F.D.A. administrative and legal Remedies End

Learning Objectives:

  • Understand F.D.A.'s recall authority and policy
  • Learn how to manage recalls under F.D.A. oversight
  • Learn how to interact with F.D.A.
  • See how to develop health risk determinations
  • Learn critical recall strategy components
  • Manage possible F.D.A. enforcement actions
  • Many more....

Who will Benefit:

  • Recall managers
  • Quality assurance managers
  • Regulatory affairs directors
  • Risk and product liability managers
  • Manufacturers' sales and marketing managers
  • Own label distributors

Companies and departments:

  • Manufacturers
  • Own Label Distributors
  • Importers
  • Healthcare institutions
  • Nursing homes
  • Medical practice groups

Topic Background:

The products regulated by the F.D.A. can cause serious adverse health consequences or death. The F.D.A.'s recall program is designed to make sure firms' recalls can mitigate such problems, even when the adverse consequence seems remote. The F.D.A.'s recall program has remained relatively the same over several years. How the F.D.A. and industry manage recalls and learn from their mistakes continues to evolve. Recalls have become more efficient through the benefit of technology. In other ways the reason for recalls remains substantially the same. The F.D.A.'s recall procedures and regulatory management of any risk to health are still sufficient to determine whether a recall is effective and whether manufacturers learn from their mistakes.

Training Options

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Recording
 $249  

Digital Download
 $299  

Transcript (PDF)
 $249  

Tokyo

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