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Regulatory Coordinator
Full course · Essential Records Infrastructure & Document Management
Regulatory Coordinator
Full course · Essential Records Infrastructure & Document Management
Free Lesson Preview
Module 1: Lesson 1

Provides a structured evaluation framework for electronic document management systems covering validation status, audit trail capabilities, access controls, and data integrity features.
A site managing 22 active clinical trials invites three electronic document management system vendors to conduct live demonstrations. The site director attends all three. The first vendor leads with a polished interface -- drag-and-drop filing, color-coded status indicators, a mobile app for document access during monitoring visits. The second vendor emphasizes integration, showing how its platform connects to the site's existing electronic health record system and automatically pulls investigator CVs and medical licenses. The third vendor opens with a different slide altogether: a matrix showing how each system function maps to a specific regulatory requirement under ICH E6(R3) Section 4.3 and 21 CFR Part 11.
The site director is visibly impressed by the first two demonstrations. The interfaces are intuitive. The features are appealing. But when the regulatory coordinator asks the first vendor a specific question -- "Does your audit trail capture changes to user access permissions, and can that log be independently reviewed per Section 4.2.2(a)(i)?" -- the vendor's response is a pause, followed by: "Our system tracks all document activity." That is not the same thing. And the difference between those two statements -- between tracking document activity and capturing permission changes as an auditable metadata event -- is the difference between a system that satisfies the regulatory framework and one that merely appears to.
This lesson teaches the regulatory coordinator to be the person who asks that question. Not the person captivated by the interface, but the person who translates regulatory requirements into specific evaluation criteria, formulates questions that probe whether a vendor's claims withstand scrutiny, and applies the proportionality principle to determine how rigorously a given system warrants evaluation.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
Continue with the Regulatory Coordinator track
Enroll to access all courses in the Regulatory Coordinator track.
Unlock the full courseFree Lesson Preview
Module 1: Lesson 1

Provides a structured evaluation framework for electronic document management systems covering validation status, audit trail capabilities, access controls, and data integrity features.
A site managing 22 active clinical trials invites three electronic document management system vendors to conduct live demonstrations. The site director attends all three. The first vendor leads with a polished interface -- drag-and-drop filing, color-coded status indicators, a mobile app for document access during monitoring visits. The second vendor emphasizes integration, showing how its platform connects to the site's existing electronic health record system and automatically pulls investigator CVs and medical licenses. The third vendor opens with a different slide altogether: a matrix showing how each system function maps to a specific regulatory requirement under ICH E6(R3) Section 4.3 and 21 CFR Part 11.
The site director is visibly impressed by the first two demonstrations. The interfaces are intuitive. The features are appealing. But when the regulatory coordinator asks the first vendor a specific question -- "Does your audit trail capture changes to user access permissions, and can that log be independently reviewed per Section 4.2.2(a)(i)?" -- the vendor's response is a pause, followed by: "Our system tracks all document activity." That is not the same thing. And the difference between those two statements -- between tracking document activity and capturing permission changes as an auditable metadata event -- is the difference between a system that satisfies the regulatory framework and one that merely appears to.
This lesson teaches the regulatory coordinator to be the person who asks that question. Not the person captivated by the interface, but the person who translates regulatory requirements into specific evaluation criteria, formulates questions that probe whether a vendor's claims withstand scrutiny, and applies the proportionality principle to determine how rigorously a given system warrants evaluation.
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
Continue with the Regulatory Coordinator track
Enroll to access all courses in the Regulatory Coordinator track.
Unlock the full course