Visual of QbD evolution with pillars representing systems, behavior, and culture in pharma

The QMS4 Lens on QbD: A Modern Redesign Rooted in Human Systems

Introduction: QbD Is Aging — But Not Gracefully

When the pharmaceutical world embraced Quality by Design (QbD) in the early 2000s, it was revolutionary. The idea that quality could be built into a product rather than tested at the end was a massive shift from reactive quality assurance to proactive quality design. ICH Q8 (R2), Q9, and Q10 formed the Holy Trinity of this movement.

But here’s the hard truth: QbD hasn’t fully delivered.

Not because the principles are flawed, but because the application stopped short. We’ve built incredible design spaces, control strategies, and risk assessments. But we never designed for the behavioral systems behind them. The assumption was: “If you design the process well enough, the people will follow.”

That assumption is cracking.

At QMS4, we believe it’s time for QbD 2.0—a model where People, Patterns, and Culture are given as much design attention as Products and Processes.

This article explores that redesign.


The Gap in Traditional QbD

ICH Q8 tells us how to define design space and control variability. Q9 gives us a risk lens, and Q10 ties it into the pharmaceutical quality system.

But none of these guidelines teach us:

  • How to reduce human error without blaming people
  • How to create CAPAs that change behavior, not just fix systems
  • How to maintain quality when pressure, fatigue, and ambiguity rise
  • How to design quality habits, not just quality documents

The gap isn’t in the science. It’s in the behavioral systems that support that science.

 

Behavior Is a System

Let’s be clear: Behavior isn’t random.

Most quality failures don’t happen because someone didn’t know what to do. They happen because the system around them wasn’t designed to support the right action at the right time. Think:

  • CAPA fatigue
  • Checklist blindness
  • Risk normalization
  • SOP non-compliance (even after retraining)

These aren’t knowledge gaps. These are behavioral breakdowns.

And just like we use design space and risk analysis to shape product outcomes, we need behavioral design to shape quality outcomes.

The QMS4 Redesign: QbD Rooted in Human Systems

At QMS4, we propose a modern framework that places human systems at the center of QbD 2.0. Here’s how:

1. Redesigning Risk: The Emotional Layer

ICH Q9 focuses on probability, severity, and detectability. But it misses:

  • Cognitive biases (e.g., optimism bias, anchoring)
  • Emotional trade-offs (e.g., speed vs. safety)
  • Perception of risk vs. actual risk

In the real world, people don’t assess risk like a spreadsheet. They use heuristics, habits, and social cues. So we redesign risk tools to include behavioral triggers and motivational context.

Example: In supplier audits, we train assessors to detect “compliance theater” — when systems look compliant but behavior says otherwise.

2. From SOPs to Habits: Procedural Literacy

Most SOPs are long, abstract, and cognitively dense.

QMS4 think the idea of Procedural Literacy — designing SOPs that:

  • Are intuitive, not just compliant
  • Use visuals, nudges, and reminders
  • Acknowledge friction points (e.g., time pressure, shift handover)

We treat SOPs as behavioral artifacts — not just documents, but tools to influence consistent action.

3. CAPAs That Change Behavior, Not Just Systems

The typical CAPA cycle is:

  1. Identify root cause
  2. Fix the system
  3. Retrain people

But retraining doesn’t work if the system still supports the wrong behavior.

We propose to apply behavioral science in CAPA design:

  • Use of behavioral mapping (5 Whys + Emotional Whys)
  • Design interventions with feedback loops
  • Include behavioral KPIs (e.g., adherence, engagement, peer feedback)

We move from Corrective Action to Cognitive Alignment.

4. Patterns Over Incidents

Traditional QbD reacts to events.

QbD 2.0 think to tracks patterns.

Example: Instead of treating each deviation as an isolated case, analyze:

  • Time of day
  • Task complexity
  • Psychological state (fatigue, stress)
  • Team dynamics

This creates a behavioral risk profile for each process, line, or shift.

Patterns predict future failure better than any single root cause.

5. Metrics That Matter

What gets measured gets managed. But what if we’re measuring the wrong things?

QMS4 proposes a shift from only measuring output (e.g., number of deviations) to measuring:

  • Signal strength (are people reporting early?)
  • Psychological safety (are issues raised without fear?)
  • Habit strength (how automatic are quality actions?)

We use tools like behavioral pulse surveys, incident lag analysis, and quality culture heatmaps.

6. Culture: The Invisible Design Space

Culture is often treated as “soft” or secondary.

But at QMS4, we think, culture is the design space of behavior. It influences every quality decision:

  • Do people speak up?
  • Do they challenge a bad batch?
  • Do they prioritize patient safety over production targets?

QMS4 proposing to use models like Schein’s Cultural Iceberg and The 5C Culture Framework to integrate culture into QbD 2.0.


Where the ICH Guidelines Fall Short

Let’s briefly revisit the ICH trilogy:

ICH Q8: Pharmaceutical Development

  • Focus: Design Space, CPPs, CQAs
  • Gap: No guidance on behavioral variability, decision-making in ambiguity

ICH Q9: Quality Risk Management

  • Focus: FMEA, Fault Tree, Risk Matrices
  • Gap: No mention of cognitive bias, motivational trade-offs, or organizational behavior

ICH Q10: Pharmaceutical Quality System

  • Focus: Lifecycle approach, Management Review
  • Gap: No structure for measuring behavior, cultural maturity, or leadership influence

The QMS4 doesn’t discard these—it extends them.


Let’s think of a scenerio: The Aseptic Fatigue Failure

Company X had invested heavily in design controls. Their procedures were top-tier. But over a 6-month span, they had repeated gowning violations and near misses.

A typical CAPA suggested retraining.

Consultant Y was brought in and discovered:

  • Shift overlaps led to shortcuts during gowning
  • Visual cues in the change room were inconsistent
  • Peer pressure discouraged reporting “small stuff”

Consultant intervention:

  • Redesigned gowning room with behavioral cues (for example “Right Vs Wrong Displays”)
  • Created peer recognition for best practices
  • Introduced micro-feedback loops (badge system)

Result:

  • 68% reduction in deviations in 3 months
  • Higher reporting of minor issues
  • Increased team ownership of in behavior

Pharma vs Food: Two QbDs, One Missed Link

QMS4 works across food, pharma, and biotech. And here’s what we found:

  • Food QbD focuses more on process control and hazard prevention
  • Pharma QbD is heavier on documentation and risk modeling

But neither designs for people.

Whether it’s cross-contamination in a dairy plant or line clearance in a sterile facility, behavior is always the tipping point.


QbD 2.0: A New Definition

“Quality by Design is a systematic approach to development that begins with predefined objectives and emphasizes product and process understanding and control, based on sound science and quality risk management.” — ICH Q8 (R2)

QMS4 redefines it:

“QbD 2.0 is a human-centered approach to quality that integrates process, behavioral, and cultural design in addition to product to deliver resilient, compliant, and high-performing systems.”

llustration of three interconnected pillars labeled Systems, Behavior, and Culture in a pharmaceutical facility, with 'Behavior' highlighted in teal to represent the QbD 2.0 shift toward behavior-centric quality.
QbD 2.0: From Process to People — Behavior, Culture as the Missing Pillar.

Conclusion: Design for the People Who Power the Process

Systems don’t fail. Behaviors do.

If we want resilient GMP systems, audit-ready documentation, and a culture of quality, we need to stop designing only for the molecule or the machine.

We must design for:

  • The operator under pressure
  • The supervisor managing trade-offs
  • The QA lead juggling compliance and coaching

That’s the QMS4 lens on QbD.

Let’s evolve.

Let’s redesign.

Let’s humanize quality.


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Illustration showing the human side of Quality by Design in pharma – representing behavioral systems, GMP culture, and process design

QbD 2.0 in Pharma: Designing Quality into People, Not Just Products

Let’s start with a hard truth.

If Quality by Design (QbD) was meant to revolutionize pharma quality systems, why do we still spend 18 to 24 months preparing for a 3-day inspection? Why does the fear of a 483 still loom like a dark cloud over audit readiness?

Why do major findings still show up — even after all the procedures, protocols, validations, and controls are in place?

And here’s one that stings:

“We wrote 40 SOPs in three weeks — just for the audit. Not for GMP compliance. Not for sustained quality.”

Sound familiar?

If you’ve ever seen 30, 40, or even 50 SOPs signed on the same date, you’ve probably asked:

“When did they train people on all this?”

Most SOPs aren’t written to help people do the job better — they’re written to pass audits.

What’s Really Broken in Pharma QMS?

Let’s go deeper:

  • Change control feels like bureaucracy, not improvement
  • QMS software slows users down instead of supporting them
  • Internal audit reports get filtered to avoid political tension
  • We settle for symptoms instead of root causes — because closure, not learning, is the priority
  • Deviation classifications get manipulated to avoid escalation

If you’ve been in quality long enough, none of this surprises you.
And yet — we rarely say it out loud.

Why This Article Matters

In quality, we’ve spent decades perfecting how to design quality into products. Traditional QbD was a breakthrough — it taught us to build quality into the process from the beginning, not inspect it at the end.

But after 20 years in the field — 17 of those inside global multinational companies — I’ve come to a humbling realization:

“We can design the perfect process on paper. But if people don’t think, act, or decide with quality in mind — it doesn’t matter.”

That’s where traditional QbD falls short.

So here’s the uncomfortable question:
What if QbD has a blind spot?
A blind spot so critical that it explains why even mature systems still buckle under pressure?

QbD, in its traditional form, focuses on product specs, process controls, and risk assessments.

But it misses something fundamental:

  • How people behave under pressure
  • How decisions are made in grey zones
  • How culture shapes shortcuts, workarounds, and silence

In short: QbD designs quality into processes — not people.

A visual representation of Quality by Design 2.0 with three pillars labeled Culture, Systems, and Behavior, emphasizing a holistic quality approach beyond technical processes.
QbD 2.0 stands on three pillars: Systems, Behavior, and Culture — because quality doesn’t end at the SOP.

When the Audit Alarm Bell Rings

It was 6:47 a.m. on a rainy Thursday when Rina, the QA Officer, got the message:

“Regulatory audit scheduled next week. Full scope. Be ready.”

Her stomach dropped.

The site had just wrapped a painful CAPA cycle.
The training tracker showed multiple overdue records.
The new QMS software still glitched on uploads.
And there were whispers — always whispers — of skipped verifications on night shifts.

Rina took a deep breath. Not because she didn’t know what to do.
But because she did.

  • Fourteen-hour shifts
  • “Urgent” document updates
  • Backdated training
  • Compliance firefighting
  • People walking on eggshells

“We design quality into the product,” her manager would say.
But no one talked about the decisions made at 2 a.m. under pressure.
No one talked about designing quality into behavior — not just documents.

Why Good People Still Miss Things

This article is for every professional who has asked:

  • Why do experienced, well-intentioned people still make mistakes in GMP settings?
  • Why does compliance feel reactive instead of built-in?
  • Why does traditional QbD stop at the product?

Let’s consider a typical deviation:

A critical step was missed during line clearance.

The investigation follows protocol:
Deviation logged. Fishbone diagram. 5 Whys. RCA template. CAPA logged and closed.

But we know the deeper story:

  • The operator skipped the step because the batch record was confusing
  • The line lead didn’t double-check because they were short-staffed
  • The engineer didn’t escalate to avoid tension
  • The supervisor gave verbal approval — “just this once”

Each of these actions is behavioral — not procedural.

Traditional QbD assumes that if systems are right, people will follow.
But people don’t always work that way.

Real Life Example: The QA Officer Who “Failed” for Doing the Right Thing

Let’s think of a scenerios, Olivia — a new QA officer — flagged a critical cleaning validation gap.

She was correct. She was committed.
But her feedback caused a batch delay.

The production head was annoyed.
The site director questioned her timing.
Her manager advised her to be more “practical.”
Three months later, her contract wasn’t renewed.

What message does that send?

You can design the SOP.
You can design the policy.
But if you don’t design for accountability, courage, and trust, the system punishes good decisions.

The Psychology of Quality: Systems, Nudges, and Biases

People don’t always make decisions based on logic.
We’re influenced by emotion, context, memory, fatigue, and social cues.

Even when QbD systems are technically sound, quality outcomes can be undermined by predictable human behavior:

 Checklist Blindness

  • Fields marked “critical” become background noise
  • Red flags get ignored if they’ve never caused issues
  • People stop “seeing” what they see every day

How to fix it:

  • Reduce checklist fields by 20%
  • Use icons and color cues
  • Rotate formats periodically

 CAPA Fatigue

  • Multiple deviations = one generic “training” CAPA
  • Root causes repeat: “human error,” “lack of attention”
  • Closure becomes a checkbox, not a change

Truth: Human error is a symptom — not a cause.
If the system doesn’t change, neither will the outcome.

 Cognitive Bias in Risk Assessments

  • We assume others understand what we understand
  • Familiarity lowers our risk perception
  • We over-trust procedural compliance

These aren’t process flaws. They’re human perception gaps.

QbD 2.0 = Product + Process + People + Patterns

To evolve QbD, we must design not just for systems, but for behavior.

Here’s what QbD 2.0 looks like:

 1. Product

Traditional: Define Critical Quality Attributes (CQAs)
QbD 2.0: Also define user risk behaviors (e.g., misuse, storage errors)

 2. Process

Traditional: Control CPPs, ensure process capability
QbD 2.0: Also build behavioral friction (e.g., smart deviations, forcing functions)

 3. People

Traditional: Train staff on SOPs
QbD 2.0: Also design culture cues (e.g., feedback loops, peer norms, psychological safety to speak)

 4. Patterns

Traditional: Analyze audits, metrics, deviations
QbD 2.0: Also map behavioral drift over time (e.g., CAPA fatigue, normalization of shortcuts)

A diagram showing the four pillars of QbD 2.0 — Product, Process, People, and Patterns — representing a modern, holistic approach to pharmaceutical quality.
QbD 2.0: Designing Quality across Products, Processes, People, and Patterns — not just the production line.

Where to Apply This Framework

Use QbD 2.0 principles in:

  • RCA investigations
  • Internal audits
  • SOP and checklist design
  • Onboarding programs
  • Continuous improvement cycles

Ask not just: “Did they follow the SOP?”
Ask:

  • “What made the wrong action easier?”
  • “What do we tolerate that reinforces poor decisions?”
  • “What makes the right choice harder than it should be?”

Design Quality into Decision Points — Not Just Deliverables

Every procedure is a decision environment.

  • Will the analyst document honestly — or quietly “correct” a mistake?
  • Will the technician stop when something feels off — or keep going?
  • Will the QA reviewer raise a flag — or avoid tension?

Don’t just define the right step.
Design the environment that makes it easier to take.

Behavioral Design in Action

 1. Smart Deviation Review

Add a field: “Was any workaround used, even if no deviation occurred?”

This normalizes discussion of behavioral gaps before they become audit findings.

 2. Reinforcement Messaging

Instead of annual training on ALCOA+, display monthly micro-reminders on screensavers, passcards, or checklists:

“Integrity = I do it the way I say I do it.”

Simple, frequent repetition works better than dense training slides.

 3. Pre-Mortem Before Process Changes

Before implementing a change, ask the team:

“What’s the most likely way this will be ignored or bypassed in 6 months?”

This activates real-world behavioral foresight — not just procedural theory.

Why This Matters: The Future of Quality Is Behavioral

By 2030, the most compliant sites won’t just have perfect documentation.
They’ll have:

  • Teams that trust and challenge
  • Cultures that reinforce integrity
  • Systems that nudge the right choice

They will:

  • Design SOPs that are usable, not just compliant
  • Write deviations that tell stories, not tick boxes
  • Create systems that help people want to do the right thing

This isn’t about being soft — it’s about being strategic.
Because systems don’t behave. People do.

Three pillars labeled People, representing the behavioral foundation of QbD 2.0, with a central message: Systems don’t fail—behaviors do.
Systems don’t fail. Behaviors do. That’s why QbD 2.0 is built on one foundation: People.

Final Reflection: Quality is a Human System

Let’s go back to Olivia — the QA officer from the beginning.

What if her company didn’t just fix documents for the audit?
What if they fixed the behavioral gaps the system creates?

Imagine a workplace where:

  • Supervisors don’t fear escalation
  • Checklists are designed to engage
  • Human error is investigated, not punished
  • QbD includes behavior — not just specs and controls

“Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets.” — W. Edwards Deming

If we want better outcomes, we must build better systems — and that means better behavior by design.

Key Takeaways: What You Can Expect from QbD 2.0

Traditional QbD misses the behavioral dimension — people, perception, habits, and context
QbD 2.0 adds behavioral science, system psychology, and human-centered design
Start today: Design for decisions, not just for documentation

QbD 2.0 is not a new regulation. It’s a new lens.
A mindset that says: Quality isn’t just what we make — it’s how we think, act, and decide.

Let’s Reflect Together

Have you ever made a decision you weren’t fully sure about — because the system didn’t support another way?
How would your team change if QbD included behavioral design?

Share your thoughts. Let’s build better systems — not just fix broken ones.

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