Section 14 - ISO 19011
Audit Completion and Follow-up: ISO 19011- Section 14
Audit Completion:
The audit is completed when all activities described in the audit plan have been carried out and
the approved audit report has been distributed.
Documents pertaining to the audit should be retained by agreement between the participating parties
and in accordance with audit program procedures and applicable statutory, regulatory and contractual
requirements.
If your company is registered/certified to one or more of the international standards you must
retain the audit records. Audit records must be available for your third-party auditors to review for compliance to
the standard's requirements and effectiveness of the audit process. Audit results are also required to be reviewed
at the management review meetings. Audit results are also, a significant input for continual improvement.
Unless required by law, the audit team and those responsible for managing the audit program should
not disclose the contents of documents, or any other information obtained during the audit, or the audit report, to
any other party without the explicit approval of the auditee. If disclosure of the contents of an audit document is
required, the audit client and auditee should be informed as soon as possible.
Conducting audit follow-up:
The conclusions of the audit may indicate the need for corrective, preventive or improvement
actions. These actions are usually decided and undertaken by the auditee within an agreed timeframe and are not
considered to be part of the audit. The auditee should keep the audit client informed of the status of these
actions.
The completion and effectiveness of corrective action must be verified. This verification may be
part of a subsequent audit. The audit program may specify follow-up by members of the audit team, which adds value
by using their expertise. In such cases, care should be taken to maintain independence in subsequent audit
activities.
The auditor or audit team members should not be involved in developing or implementing any
corrective actions for nonconformances arising from an audit they conducted. Involving yourself in corrective
actions gives the impression of ownership. Ownership involves bias.
Section 1. ISO 19011 Scope
reference and definitions
Section 2. ISO 19011 Principles
of auditing
Section 3. ISO 19011 Managing an
audit program
Section 4. ISO 19011 Audit program implementation
Section 5. ISO 19011 Audit
activities
Section 6. ISO 19011 Preparing
for onsite activities
Section 7. ISO 19011 Conducting
onsite activities
Section 8. ISO 19011 What the
auditor is looking for
Section 9 ISO 19011 Audit
reporting
Section 10. ISO 19011 Audit
techniques
Section 11. ISO 19011 Audit
path
Section 12. ISO 19011 Effective
communications
Section 13. ISO 19011
Sampling
Section 14. ISO 19011 Audit
completion and follow-up
Section 15. ISO 19011
Competence and evaluation of auditors
This represents a summary of the section in ISO 19011:2002. It's suggested that you obtain
an copy of "ISO 19011 Explanations and Definitions".
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