Overview:
When
design flaws go unnoticed until late in production—or when a batch fails
inspection with no clear justification—sampling is often at the root of the
problem. In highly regulated industries like medical devices and life sciences,
the way companies approach sampling can make or break the success of a
verification, validation, or production control effort. Yet many professionals
still rely on outdated shortcuts or “what we’ve always done,” rather than
starting with a solid statistical foundation.
The
FDA and other regulatory bodies have significantly stepped up scrutiny in this
area. From warning letters to audit findings, there’s been a clear shift:
manufacturers must now defend their sampling choices with documented,
statistical reasoning. It's no longer enough to say “we tested five units” or
“we’ve always used this plan”—inspectors increasingly ask why, and expect a
response that ties back to risk, data, and sound methodology.
The
pressure isn't just regulatory. Internally, organizations are struggling with
conflicting demands—minimize waste, prove compliance, and still meet aggressive
production timelines. That tension often leads to under-sampling critical
processes or over-sampling low-risk ones, wasting resources and creating gaps
in quality assurance. Without a clear, scalable sampling strategy, teams can’t
move confidently through design verification or maintain control of day-to-day
operations.
This
webinar steps in where that uncertainty begins. It focuses on the practical
challenges professionals face when creating or applying sampling plans for
verification, validation, and production processes. From engineers drafting
protocols to quality teams preparing for audits, many struggle to determine
when a sampling plan is needed, how much is “enough,” and how to explain that
decision to regulators or stakeholders.
Whether
you're dealing with complex components, tight tolerances, or increasing FDA
oversight, the risks of poor sampling are real—and so is the need to get it
right the first time. This session helps attendees step back from the guesswork
and focus on clarity, consistency, and confidence in how sampling is handled
across the product lifecycle.
Areas
covered in the session:
- Basic
statistics
- The
main parameters that should be considered
- Formulas
related to sampling
- Sampling
standards
Why
Should You Attend?
If
you’ve ever found yourself guessing the right sample size, pulling numbers from
past protocols, or struggling to explain a sampling decision during an audit,
you’re not alone. Many professionals face pressure to move fast while still
meeting regulatory expectations—but without a clear, statistically grounded
approach, sampling decisions can quickly become a weak point in otherwise
strong protocols.
This
webinar offers clarity. It’s designed to help you understand the core
principles behind sampling plans—why they matter, how regulators view them, and
what your documentation should reflect. You’ll walk away better prepared to
defend your choices, improve consistency across your protocols, and avoid
common pitfalls that trigger compliance concerns.
Most
importantly, it will help you reduce uncertainty. Whether you’re drafting a
design verification plan or supporting production quality, this session will
provide you with a structured way to approach sampling—so you’re not relying on
guesswork, assumptions, or outdated templates.
Who
Will Benefit?
This
webinar is ideal for professionals involved in verification, validation, and
production quality processes who need to ensure their sampling plans are
statistically sound and audit-ready. Those include:
- Quality
Assurance Professionals
- Quality
Control Analysts
- Validation
Engineers
- Process
Engineers
- Manufacturing
Engineers
- Regulatory
Affairs Specialists
- Design
Assurance Engineers
- Compliance
Officers
- Production
Supervisors
- Documentation
Specialists
- R&D
Engineers
- Risk
Management Personnel
- Technical
Project Leads
- Internal
Auditors
- Quality
System Managers
- Supplier
Quality Engineers
José Mora is a Principal Consultant specializing in Manufacturing Engineering and Quality Systems. For over 30 years he has worked in the medical device and life sciences industry specializing in manufacturing, process development, tooling, and quality systems. Prior to working full time as a consulting partner for Atzari Consulting, José served as Director of Manufacturing Engineering at Boston Scientific and as Quality Systems Manager at Stryker Orthopedics, where he introduced process performance, problem solving, and quality system methodologies. During that time he prepared a white paper on the application of lean manufacturing methods to the creation and management of controlled documents and a template for strategic deployment.
José led the launch of manufacturing at a start-up urology products company as Director of Manufacturing for UroSurge, Inc. at the University of Iowa’s business incubator park in Coralville, IA, creating a world-class medical device manufacturing operation, with JIT, kanban systems, visual workplace and lean manufacturing practices.
José worked for 10 years at Cordis Corporation, now a Cardinal Health company, where he led the successful tooling, process development and qualification of Cordis’ first PTA (percutaneous transluminal angioplasty) catheter. His medical device experience includes surgical instruments, PTA & PTCA dilatation and guiding catheters, plastic surgery implants and tissue expanders, urology implants and devices for the treatment of incontinence, delivery systems for brachytherapy, orthopaedic implants and instruments, and vascular surgery grafts and textiles. During his time at Cordis, José managed the Maintenance and Facilities Department, taking that operation to a level rated as “tops” by the UK Department of Health and Social Services (DHSS) during one of their intensive audits.
Jose managed Manufacturing Engineering as part of the Guiding Catheter Core Team of managers, a team that took the Cordis Guiding Catheter business to lead the market, bringing it up from fourth place. By introducing world-class techniques, the Guiding Catheter design and manufacturing was completely re-engineered for robust design and tooling, under Jose’s leadership. He was also instrumental and played a leadership role in the complete re-engineering of the Tooling Control System, including design drafting, the tool shop and technical support. Wherever he has worked, he has a track record of introducing world-class methodologies such as Kepner-Tregoe, Taguchi techniques, Theory of Constraints, Lean Manufacturing, Five S (Visual Workplace), process validation to Global Harmonization Task Force standards, and similar approaches.
Enrollment Options
Tags: Sampling Plans, Verification & Validation, Process Validation, FDA Compliance, Medical Device Quality, Life Sciences Training, Quality Assurance, Manufacturing Compliance, Production Control, Audit Readiness, Jose Mora, May 2025, Webinar,