Top 5 Mistakes Clinics Make with X-Ray Quality Assurance

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By MVD Team
The MVD X-Ray Technologies team is made up of engineers, software developers, and x-ray technician specialists dedicated to improving digital radiography quality assurance across Canada. We combine expertise in medical device design, radiation safety, and AI-based image analysis to help clinics stay compliant and confident in their daily QA routines.

X-ray quality assurance is not complicated on paper.

Most clinics know they should be checking image quality, recording results, and keeping equipment consistent. The problem is not awareness. It is execution.

Small gaps in QA processes are one of the most common reasons clinics run into compliance issues, especially as expectations around Safety Code 30 continue to tighten.

If your current system feels "good enough", these are the mistakes worth paying attention to.

1. Skipping Daily QA Testing

One of the most common issues is inconsistency.

Clinics may perform QA regularly, but not every day. Tests get skipped during busy schedules, staff changes, or simple oversight.

The problem is that compliance is not based on intention. It is based on consistency.

Missing even a few days can create gaps in your records that are easy to spot during an inspection.

2. Relying on Paper Logs or Spreadsheets

Manual record keeping seems straightforward, but it creates risk.

With paper logs or basic spreadsheets:

  • Entries can be missed
  • Records can be lost or damaged
  • Data can be inconsistent between staff
  • Reviewing history takes time

Even well managed clinics run into issues here. The more manual the system, the harder it is to keep everything complete and organized.

3. Treating QA as a Quick Visual Check

A quick glance at an image is not enough.

Many clinics rely on subjective judgment instead of consistent, measurable checks. Over time, this leads to:

  • Variability between staff
  • Missed early signs of equipment issues
  • Gradual decline in image quality

Without a standardized process, QA becomes inconsistent, even if it is done daily.

4. Not Catching Small Issues Early

X-ray systems rarely fail all at once.

Most problems start small:

  • Slight drops in image clarity
  • Minor artifacts
  • Gradual calibration drift

Without consistent QA, these changes go unnoticed until they affect diagnostics or require retakes.

By the time the issue is obvious, it is already costing time and impacting patient care.

5. Poor Documentation and Missing Records

This is where many clinics struggle during inspections.

Even if QA is performed, the documentation may be:

  • Incomplete
  • Disorganized
  • Missing specific days
  • Difficult to verify

From an inspector’s perspective, missing documentation often looks the same as not doing the test at all.

Clear, consistent records are just as important as the testing itself.

Why These Mistakes Matter More Now

As compliance expectations increase, the margin for error is shrinking.

What used to be acceptable as informal QA is no longer enough. Clinics are expected to show:

  • Daily consistency
  • Reliable documentation
  • Clear processes
  • Verifiable results

The issue is that most of these mistakes are not intentional. They come from systems that rely too heavily on manual effort.

How Clinics Are Fixing These Gaps

Many clinics are moving toward more structured QA workflows to eliminate these risks.

Instead of relying on memory and manual tracking, they are using systems that:

  • Standardize daily testing
  • Automatically record results
  • Remove gaps in documentation
  • Make records easy to access at any time

When the process is built into the system, consistency becomes much easier to maintain.

A Common Pattern

When clinics review their QA process, they usually find that the biggest problems are not major failures.

They are small inconsistencies that repeat over time.

A missed day here. An unclear log there. A test done slightly differently depending on the person.

Individually, these seem minor. Together, they create risk.

Tightening the process, especially around consistency and record keeping, tends to solve most of these issues at once.

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