The Top 10 Reasons For A Delayed ICAVL Application


from the February 2007 issue

Each quarter, 30-40% of ICAVL applicant laboratories receives a delay status for one or more applications submitted for accreditation or reaccreditation. Delay of the laboratory's application requires that additional material be sent to further demonstrate adherence to the ICAVL Standards and/or provide the adequate documentation necessary for a complete application review. Though these problems can often be easily corrected and a potential lapse in the laboratory's accreditation prevented, the disappointment and additional demands placed upon laboratory staff due to a delayed accreditation might be avoided by identifying the potential problems prior to the application submission.

The following is a list of the ten most frequent reasons an accreditation decision is delayed, as well as several ways to help prevent a delay in your laboratory's accreditation.


10.) Insufficient or inappropriate CME.

  • 15 hours of relevant CME is required every three years (for medical staff, 10 of the 15 must be AMA Category I).
  • To be relevant, the course content must address the principles, instrumentation, techniques or interpretation of noninvasive vascular testing performed in the laboratory.


9.) Vague, incomplete technical protocols.

  • Protocol should include step-by-step procedure.
  • Protocol should reflect current lab practices.
  • Protocol should include the minimum components required by the ICAVL Standards (Standards 3.1 and 3.2 in all testing areas).


8.) Incomplete final reports.

  • Include the components required by the ICAVL Standards (Section 4 of the Organization Standards).
    • Indication for examination
    • Body of findings and separate summary
    • Signature block
    • Signature/completion date


7.) Low overall QA accuracy.

  • Correlation accuracy must be >70%; if not, be proactive and assess for problems, then write a plan for improvement and reassessment.
  • Be certain that the QA matrix is correctly completed and that the calculation of statistics is accurate.


6.) Insufficient number of quality assurance correlations.

  • There are specific requirements for each testing section and are included in Section 6 of each set of testing standards.
  • A minimum of 30 internal carotid artery, 30 limb (venous and arterial), 15 intracranial cases and 15 visceral cases correlated to other radiographic procedures or surgical pathology are required over the three-year accreditation period.
  • If it is impossible to meet the minimum requirement, be proactive by enhancing the QA program by including alternative methods such as peer review.

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