Note: Fees (prices) on this site are in GBP and do not include carriage / handling fees and VAT. Customers outside the UK may also incur local charges, including (but not limited to) import duties, local taxes and customs clearance fees, which may add significant cost to your order. Prices here are for the PT round or QC / Reference Material only and the total price payable may be higher.

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Test Description

Animal products for human consumption are tightly legislated and closely monitored for compliance. Veterinary medicines used in animals are likely to have a pharmacological effect in humans. Hence, for many veterinary medicines, there are extremely low maximum residue limits or even no MRL (i.e. any detection is non-compliant). The Fapas quality control materials are produced in keeping with EU MRLs or minimum required performance limit (MRPL) where MRLs are not set. The result reporting requirements are also in keeping with quality control guidelines laid out in EC/657/2002. Fapas veterinary medicine quality control materials include incurred residues as well as fortified animal products. The quality control materials are grouped in analytical chemical class/matrix combinations and combine identification and quantification. The proficiency tests are suitable for all methods, including screening methods (for the detection of total amount of that chemical class).

Individual tetracyclines, plus 'total tetracyclines' for the benefit of participants using ELISA test kits, can be evaluated within this quality control material.

Tetracyclines are well-utilised across the farming industry, maintaining high-quality livestock and ensuring any disease is managed effectively to ensure the minimum negative impact is incurred. Due to the well-known benefits of these veterinary medicines, they can be easily overused within poor farming practices. To combat this and mitigate any potential risks to the consumer, your effective testing activities must be safeguarded and undergo constant quality control checks.

Honey is globally consumed and incurs a large-scale demand year round. As such honey stocks and their supply chains are put under large amounts of pressure to satisfy this demand which can lead to poor farming practices being undertaken.

Quality control materials can provide the ideal way to track your testing progress between your proficiency testing activities. They are also ideal to use within your standardisation practices, such as staff training or instrumentation verification activities. This helps remove any bias from your testing arrangement, from which to maintain the high-quality testing ability your customers, and regulators, expect.

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