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Despite
managing and working with assets differently, there
are certain benefits from improving collaboration between
calibration and maintenance personnel. First, there
are the duplicated efforts involved in using two separate
and distinct systems. For the most part, each group
is working with the same set of assets, collecting a
lot of the same profile information on the asset: description,
ID, manufacturer, applications, etc. This brings up
questions not only of efficiency but also compliance
concerns when identical information, with possible variations
due to errors, is being stored in multiple locations.
There
are also similarities between how the groups work with
assets: maintenance, calibration and validation events
occur for many assets on a set schedule, with a procedure
or collection of procedures to follow for each event,
and requirements for documented evidence that the event
took place. However because maintenance personnel generally
manage activity through work requests and have to manage
inventory (with like-for-like replacement concerns in
life science industries); and calibration personnel
prefer to manage activity from an instrument-centric
approach with standards traceability and measurement
data collection, a single system that does not require
a compromise to one group’s efficiency or compliance
has been difficult.
No
where has the drive for harmonization between calibration
and maintenance management systems been more keenly
felt than the life science industries. Within these
industries, not only are there some real similarities
for the management of these activities, but also ultimately
the goal is also the same for everyone: to keep the
process working as designed in order to preserve the
controlled and validated state. In this effort, there
is interaction that takes place. For example, during
the initial commissioning of a new piece of equipment,
it passes through a complete validation cycle that includes
calibration. Once in production, routine maintenance
is usually performed on it that in many cases will require
recalibration before it can re-enter production. When
routine maintenance isn’t enough to fix a problem
or replacement parts are no longer available, the asset
enters a change control process that will require revalidation
and calibration once a solution has been worked out.
Blue
Mountain Regulatory Asset Manager offers a platform
designed to satisfy the needs of calibration, maintenance,
and validation individually while enabling collaboration
between all groups. Common information about assets
is stored in one place, but each group can work with
those assets in a way that makes sense for them. When
events are scheduled or completed a notification can
be sent to another department so if follow up activity
is required it can be scheduled quickly and efficiently.
When changes are required, a configurable approval routing
path can secure the required approvals and keep everyone
informed seamlessly.
Even
such additional asset and facility management activity
as IT asset management and environmental monitoring
is easily supported by Blue Mountain Regulatory Asset
Manager.
Additional
benefits of this harmonized approach include:
- A
single system to validate
- Lower
computer hardware and system maintenance costs
- Clean
and simple upgrade path
- Lower
overall costs of ownership
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