Having confidence in the comparability of measurement results is central to international
trade, accurate diagnosis and effective treatment of medical conditions, and successful
delivery of multinational technical projects. The concept of metrological traceability
underpins comparability of measurement results and is a key component of two important
laboratory quality standards, ISO/IEC 17025 and ISO 15189.
These are widely used accreditation standards against which the competence of testing and
clinical laboratories, respectively, are assessed. This tutorial article describes the
role and importance of metrological traceability in achieving comparable measurement
results, compares the traceability requirements of ISO/IEC 17025 and ISO 15189, and gives practising analysts a scheme for identifying and
addressing the important factors in their measurement procedures which influence
traceability in order to meet these requirements. It introduces the reader to some
important metrological concepts, using the International Vocabulary of Metrology (VIM) as
a reference, and describes the international measurement infrastructure. The article
focuses on chemical and biological measurements, but the basic concepts are relevant to
all analytical measurements.
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