A quality manual is the top-level document of a quality management system. It is similar to a constitution of a country or a manifesto of a party. This type of document establishes the policy-level position of a government, party or in the case of a quality manual, a company’ QMS. There are at least two definitions of what a quality manual for an ISO 13485 quality management system should be:
ISO 10013, Guidelines for Developing Quality Manuals, element 4.2, provides suggestions for creating a quality manual. It defines a quality manual, among other requirements, as a document that should “consist of, or refer to, the documented quality system procedures intended for planning and administration of activities which impact on quality” ISO 13485:2003, element 4.2.2 describes a quality manual as a document containing:
1 – your QMS scope
2 – details of and justification for any exclusion or non-application;
3 – quality management system procedures or reference to them;
4 – a description of interaction between the processes of the QMS
5 – definition of the QMS structure
Typically, companies state the scope of their QMS in the Scope or Introduction sections of their quality manuals, similar to “XYZ Corporation assembles, packages and distributes personal hygiene product packs to hospitals and doctors’ offices”
Now, after we established the scope of our ISO 13485:2003 QMS, we need to describe the processes we use to achieve the results stated in our scope. While we are doing this, we need to remember to reference corresponding procedures. Per my experience, the easiest way to do it is to transform the standard from a list of requirements into your organization’s dedication to satisfy those requirements. For example: Element 5.5.2.c of ISO 13485:2003 requires a Management Representative to ensure “? promotion of awareness regulatory and customer requirements ?” our manual will affirm: “The Management Representative ensures that regulatory and customer requirements are clearly communicated throughout the organization per the Purchasing Procedure and Regulatory Compliance Procedure.”
Following this simple method, we can address all the requirements of ISO 13485:2003 standard and reference procedures supporting corresponding elements of your manual and quality management system. So we will comply with two three requirements of the standard.
Interaction between the processes may be documented in a number of ways. Some companies choose to define interaction of the top level processes by using variations of Figure 1 in ISO 9001:2000. Combining such a diagram with references to procedures, will define interactions between your processes. For more detailed process interaction tools, type “process interaction matrix” into your browser and you will find numerous examples.
The only requirement of the element 4.2.2 left is to describe the structure of your documentation. Some businesses I have consulted described their documentation tree as 4- or 5-level structure in the documentation management section of the manual.
After completion of your quality manual, think about other benefits a well prepared quality manual may bring you. It can communicate to your prospects, customers and vendors that your business is not only a quality-conscious organization, but that it also understands benefits of a well-documented commitment to QMS through your quality manual.
Surprisingly, many companies do not recognize this benefit. Those organizations mark their manuals with “internal use only” and “confidential” stamps, while those quality manuals can serve a company externally. We recommend to all our customers make their quality manuals public. One company I worked with, simply posted their quality manual on their Website ? go and look!
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