WHO Basic Training Modules on Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP) - Basic Principles of GMP: Module 1 (Part 08): Personnel
(2006; 29 pages)
Table des matières
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Afficher le documentBasic Principles of GMP
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Afficher le documentBasic Principles of GMP
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Afficher le documentPersonnel
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Personnel

Possible Issues - II

  • Company procedures take precedence over local legislation

  • Unclear organization diagram

  • Staff movement

  • Inadequate training records

  • Illness

Subsidiaries of multinational companies may claim that company procedures or standards take precedence over local legislation. If this is claimed, it will be most unusual since all multinationals require local companies to conform first to local legislation. It will be worth exploring with the company what benefits are obtained by not conforming to local legislation.

Large organizations often move people around through promotion, training, recruitment or relocation. In so doing they can lose sight of the requirements of GMP. Managers can be promoted into positions for which they are not qualified or experienced.

Companies may not keep adequate training records even though people are apparently undergoing training.

As with small companies, large companies may have personnel policies that penalize people. The problem is that if people are not going to be paid when sick or injured, they may work on under circumstances that create a risk to the product. What happens when they have an open wound, for example?

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Dernière mise à jour: le 3 mai 2013