Good Documentation Practices: Recordkeeping Rules That Everyone Should Follow

Get answers to the following questions: What do you mean by good documentation? What is the purpose of good documentation? What are the principles of good documentation?

buenas prácticas de documentación

Published 28 Dec 2023 Article by SafetyCulture Content Team | 11 min read

What is Good Documentation Practices?

Good documentation practices is a set of best practices for documentation and recordkeeping. It aims to preserve the data integrity of important documents and records and can also serve as guidelines for how to record information and store data appropriately.

Even outside of the pharmaceutical and manufacturing industries, information stored in documents and records, as well as maintaining proper records lifecycle practices, is critical to the functioning of your business. Keeping the following information in order will help you manage your business more efficiently:

Why You Should Care About Good Documentation Practices

The purpose of good documentation practices is to ensure that businesses and organizations have good data or data that is Attributable, Legible, Contemporaneous, Original, and Accurate (ALCOA).

Data is incredibly powerful and good data allows you to:

But how do you get these benefits? Follow the ALCOA principles that make up data integrity and are the cornerstone of good documentation practices. Each principle is discussed in detail below.

ALCOA Principles of Good Documentation Practices

Each letter in the ALCOA acronym corresponds to a characteristic of good data. These characteristics are the principles of good documentation practices.

alcoa principles good documentation practices

A – Attributable

What is it: Attributable means that you know where the data came from (who recorded it).

How to apply the principle:

L – Legible

What is it: Legible means that data is easily readable and understandable.

How to apply the principle:

C – Contemporaneous

What is it: Contemporaneous means that data is current (applicable at the time of its access) and recorded in real-time (no delay between data generation and data recording).

How to apply this principle:

Per Document Data within Each Document
Date of creation Date of recording
Date of revision Date of correction
Effective by Date of review

O – Original

What is it: Original means that data, once recorded, cannot be edited, altered, or erased.

How to apply the principle:

A – Accurate

What is it: Accurate means that data can be relied upon to be true, valid, and correct.

How to apply the principle:

In addition, following these practices make it easy for people involved to collaborate, and for the organization itself to ensure data accuracy.

Good Documentation Practices Examples

Two types of good documentation practices examples will be discussed. The first set of good documentation practices examples illustrates their importance and why you should follow them. The second set of examples shows what following good documentation practices looks like in action and will help you gain a clearer understanding of ALCOA principles.

Good Documentation Practices Examples 1

Scenario: A regulatory authority has some follow-up questions for a business that recently submitted evidence of its compliance with a regulation.
Type of information: Evidence of compliance
Principle: Attributable
Followed: Since the business immediately knows who recorded the compliance data, they are able to ask that person for more information and even have them answer the follow-up questions of the regulatory authority directly. The regulatory authority is able to confirm that the business is 100% compliant with the regulation.
Not Followed: Since the records submitted as evidence of compliance don’t identify the person responsible for creating them, the business is having difficulty finding more information on their compliance data. They are unable to answer the regulatory authority’s follow-up questions and are in danger of being deemed as non-compliant by the regulatory authority.
Scenario:
An employee is performing a critical task and needs to refer to the SOP for that task.
Type of information: Procedural documents
Principle: Legible
Followed: The employee is able to follow the SOP step-by-step since it was recorded electronically and even includes pictures and annotations to guide the employee. The employee performs the task correctly and the output of the task meets the client’s specifications.
Not Followed: Since the SOP is handwritten and the author’s handwriting is difficult to read, the employee merely guesses what some steps in the SOP are. As a result, the employee performs the task incorrectly and the output of the task is defective.
Scenario: An employee has to contact a customer to inform them that the specific item they wanted to purchase before is now in stock.
Type of information: Customer information
Principle: Contemporaneous
Followed: The contact number listed in the system is the customer’s actual contact number. As soon as the employee texts that number to inform the customer that their desired item is in stock, the customer immediately replies and places an order.
Not Followed: The contact number available to the employee is not the current contact number used by the customer. The employee doesn’t know this and keeps calling the old contact number. A significant amount of their time is spent on this.

Good Documentation Practices Examples 2

good documentation practices examplesgood documentation practices examplesgood documentation practices examplesgood documentation practices examples

Good Documentation Practices Do’s and Don’ts

good documentation practices do

Good Documentation Practices Implementation

If you’re ready to implement good documentation practices across your business but need extra guidance, refer to the information below.

Before you begin implementing good documentation practices:

If you’ve decided that your existing documents don’t need to follow good documentation practices or if you’ve already done the required steps to apply good documentation practices to existing documents, then you can begin the implementation of the following:

  1. Inform – Hold an intensive training session that emphasizes the importance of good documentation practices and the real-life consequences of not following them (use example scenarios provided earlier). Retrain employees at least every 3 months.
  2. Enforce – Establish safeguards against non-compliance (e.g., by making certain items mandatory). Assign enforcement responsibility to a Quality Assurance (QA) team lead or create a QA team specifically for enforcing good documentation practices.
  3. Sustain – Make good documentation practices part of employees’ day-to-day routine. All business procedures involving documentation should follow the set best practices. Regularly check (at least every 6 months) if people across your business are following good documentation practices and if the created documents reflect that.

Digitize the way you work

Eliminate manual tasks and streamline your operations.

Follow Good Documentation Practices with SafetyCulture

SafetyCulture (formerly iAuditor) is a data entry software that’s been included in Capterra’s 2021 Shortlist, GetApp’s 2021 Category Leaders, and Software Advice’s 2021 Frontrunners. SafetyCulture is free to download as a web-based software and as a mobile app. Here are some of SafetyCulture’s features for following good documentation practices easily:

Need help creating a digital document and going paperless? SafetyCulture has a public library of 80,000+ free templates on a variety of use cases. Customize any template to suit your needs and preferences or start using it immediately after downloading.

SafetyCulture for Good Documentation Practices

Good Documentation Practices Template

With this template, you can quickly record data while still following good documentation practices. It allows you to do the following:

SafetyCulture Content Team

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SafetyCulture Content Team

SafetyCulture Content Team

The SafetyCulture content team is dedicated to providing high-quality, easy-to-understand information to help readers understand complex topics and improve workplace safety and quality. Our team of writers have extensive experience at producing articles for different fields such as safety, quality, health, and compliance.

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