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Users Roles

Users Roles

Updated

In a medical device quality system, who can view, edit, approve, and sign records is a regulated decision, not just an IT setting. FDA 21 CFR Part 11 expects access limited to authorised individuals and an audit trail that attributes every action to ...

In a medical device quality system, who can view, edit, approve, and sign records is a regulated decision, not just an IT setting. FDA 21 CFR Part 11 expects access limited to authorised individuals and an audit trail that attributes every action to a real person. ISO 13485:2016 Clause 6.2 ties responsibilities to defined competence. Electronic records under both frameworks only hold up when the system can show exactly who did what, and when.

A defensible access model usually rests on a few principles:

  • Give every user a personal account and never a shared login, so each action stays attributable for Part 11 audit trails
  • Assign access by role rather than per person, mapping each role to the responsibilities it genuinely needs
  • Apply least privilege: grant the minimum rights a role requires, and widen them only when there is a reason
  • Separate duties, so the person who authors a document is not the only one who approves it
  • Scope access to the project or area where someone actually works, instead of granting system-wide rights by default
  • Control onboarding and offboarding, so a departing user is deactivated and their open tasks, approvals, and roles are reassigned rather than orphaned
  • Review access on a schedule to catch role creep before an auditor does

Handled this way, access control protects record integrity and leaves a clean, attributable history of every quality action.

The whitepaper below shows how qmsWrapper manages users, roles, and permissions for medical device teams.

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