The Registrar, Medical Laboratory Science Council of Nigeria (MLSCN), Dr Tosan Erhabor said that the council inspected 103 new laboratories, sealed 23 others and arrested six quacks from May 2023 till date.
Erhabor said that the MLSCN has made significant efforts to check quackery and to ensure credible medical diagnosis in the last year.
He said that these promoted professionalism among medical laboratory scientists, and reduced quackery, thus assuring quality and reliable test results.
According to him, registration and inspection of medical laboratories is one of the core mandates of the council to ensure medical laboratories meet the pre-approval requirements of the MLSCN.
Others, he said, are to conduct routine monitoring and inspection for compliance with the standard of practice and apprehend, prosecute quacks and discipline professionals involved in unwholesome and sub-standard practices.
On education, he said the council conducted routine assessments of universities offering Bachelor of Medical Laboratory Science (BMLS) programme and Colleges of Health Technology (CHTs) offering Medical Laboratory Technicians (MLT) programme.
Erhabor said that the council used structured resource verification and accreditation checklists, in line with the council’s minimum academic standard (BMAS) to conduct the routine assessment.
“These resource verification and accreditation assessments were done with a view to assessing the manpower, equipment, infrastructure available for teaching, provision of diagnostic services, research and development at those institutions,” he said.
According to him, the impact of this is upon graduation and induction, as more qualified and competent medical laboratory professionals will be available to man Nigeria’s health laboratory subsector, thus checking quackery and ensuring credible medical diagnosis.
Also, for licensure of medical laboratory practitioners, he said to check quackery and ensure credible medical diagnosis, the council insisted through institutional compliance monitoring that only registered ones conduct medical laboratory investigations.
The registrar said that the MLSCN also ensured that licensed medical laboratory scientists and medical laboratory technicians conduct investigations in both public and private medical laboratory facilities across the country.
“This guarantees competence in medical laboratory practice and External Quality Assessment/Proficiency Testing (EQA/PT),” Erhabor said.
According to him, the council has pursued the implementation of the National Quality Management System policy of 2020 formulated by the governing board of the council.
“This policy provides that the minimal requirement for the operation of medical laboratory practice in Nigeria is a demonstrable evidence of Quality Management System implementation with a mandatory participation in External Quality Assessment through inter-laboratory comparison,” he said.
Furtherance to this, he said that from May 2023 to date, the council has conducted two External Quality Assessment (EQA) test events with an increased number of laboratory enrolment from 1000 to 1590.
Erhabor said that the council established a Proficiency Testing Corrective Action Team (PT-CAT) and embarked on Corrective Action visits to Proficiency Testing performing laboratories in the six geo-political zones of the Country.
The council also leveraged funding from the United States Centre for Disease Control through the African Society for Laboratory Medicine (ASLM) he added.
The registrar said that the council has achieved the re-accreditation of the National External Quality Assessment Laboratory (NEQAL) to ISO 17043:2010.
”All these have helped reduce the number of errors emanating from health laboratory sub-sector, thus ensuring credible medical diagnosis.”
He said for medical laboratory equipment calibration in sustaining quality in laboratory diagnosis, the council with support from the CDC and the Institute for Human Virology Nigeria (IHVN) promoted accuracy in test measurements and laboratory equipment performance.
This, he said, was done through the setting up of the National Laboratory Equipment Calibration Centre (NaLECC) in Abuja with international accreditation.
“The services of this centre has reduced errors associated with laboratory equipment calibration thus ensuring credible medical diagnosis,” he said.
For In-Vitro Diagnostics (IVDs) regulation, he said that within the period under review, the council-owned Public Health In-vitro Diagnostics Control Laboratory in Yaba, Lagos, set up in pursuant of the council’s statutory mandate to regulate the production.
To regulate the importation, sale and stocking of diagnostic laboratory reagents and chemicals with the ultimate goal of checking quackery and ensuring credible medical diagnosis, the council registered new companies.
He added that the council issued several import permits, and carried out post-market validation, medical laboratory equipment, reagents and Rapid Tesk kits.
“These have impacted positively on the quality of test results emanating from medical laboratories and helped to check the proliferation of sub-standard test kits propagated by quacks in the Country.
“On Medical Laboratory Accreditation, the council accredited three new medical laboratories to ISO 15189 from May 2023 till date.
“This has helped to engender confidence in test results emanating from our laboratories on International scene as accredited by one and accepted by all popular maxim of accreditation is adhered to,” he said.
NAN