Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) are the basis for a large part of
the day-to-day training that most pharmaceutical employees are required
to perform. Still, it is not widely understood the extent of the
commitments we make when we write an SOP or how the writing of the SOP
can have a positive or negative impact on training or job performance.
For
example, there is an expectation that procedures describe the most
critical processes for product manufacturing and will be followed
consistently, with few if any deviations. In this course you will learn
the keys to writing effective SOPs, the vital connection between the
documentation and training spheres, and how to maximize this connection
to improve the quality of both SOPs and training.
To accomplish
these goals, we will review regulatory agency expectations when an SOP
is written, provide suggestions for uncovering the process in its
entirety and describe it clearly and concisely, indicate how to break
portions of the process(es) into logical chunks, and show how the SOP
and the training program can work together harmoniously. Understanding
how the average employee is swamped with more work than they can manage,
we will also provide tips for shortening this process and take
advantage of tools that probably already exist in the systems that you
use on a day-to-day basis.
We will provide valuable insights and
examples that reflect the extensive experience of the instructor in the
documentation and training fields., and which can assist you in writing
and implementing SOPs with maximum efficiency and effectiveness.
Why you should attend
- To improve the writing of SOPs for more effective training and reduction of errors
- To understand the regulatory implications of what is written in an SOP
- To learn the parameters of an effective SOP
- To distinguish a well-written SOP from a poorly written one
- To define processes better by effective interaction with the SOP process owner and/or author
- To integrate the SOP effectively into the position curricula of employees
- To explore the connection between SOPs and job performance, and measure retention of SOP content at the training stage
Who Will Benefit
- Pharmaceutical
industry, particularly those areas that develop SOPs for the
manufacturing or quality monitoring of pharmaceutical products, as well
as Information Technology (IT)
Michael Esposito has over 30
years experience in the pharmaceutical industry and 17 years experience
in GMP training and document management. He has worked for Wyeth
Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson's McNeil Consumer
Healthcare Division in a variety of areas including Packaging, project
administration, Quality Assurance, Government Contracts, translations,
systems training, and international operations. He collaborated in the
development and implementation of the training portion of the Consent
Decree workplan for McNeil and revised their introductory GMP course. He
is a member of the training organizations GMP Training Educators
Association and Association for GXP Excellence (AGXPE) and is fully
fluent in Spanish. His areas of interest include systems training,
training effectiveness, post-training user support, process improvement,
and sustainable packaging.
- Regulatory requirements for SOPs
- Using process excellence tools to create a robust process and procedure
- What commitments you make when you put your process in writing
- Keeping training in mind while writing procedures
- Consequences of noncompliance
- Define the parameters of an effective SOP
- How your foundation keeps subsequent steps from going awry
- Why poorly written procedures have a negative impact on production
- What identifies a poorly written procedure
- Compliance risks with ambiguity or excessive detail
- Interact with the SOP process owner/author to improve the writing of procedures
- Integrate the SOP effectively into the position curricula of employees
- Relationship between SOPs and employees training curricula
- Why the training department needs to be in the loop at the start of the SOP development process
- Retention of the content at the training stage
- The implications of good training for successful SOP execution
- Perform an ongoing assessment of knowledge retention of SOPs for continuous improvement
- Avoid pitfalls in revising SOPs
- Review of learning objectives