| Monitoring
Revisited |
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| While most pharmaceutical quality managers realize the importance of temperature and humidity tracking to guarantee both quality and compliance, the way in which many go about it is adding hidden costs. Technology for temperature/humidity tracking continues to evolve, and there are numerous time-saving features in recent temperature/humidity data loggers that can make a difference. On one hand, some quality managers are doing too much to track temperature /humidity data, while on the other hand some are doing too little. For many, it’s timely to revisit temperature and humidity monitoring. Here are some key points to consider. Keep Calibrations Current No matter how hectic production schedules may be, there is now little reason to lose track of calibration schedules because of the existence of free services that send notifications on scheduled calibrations for all instruments. Click here for more information on Dickson's Calibration Club. |
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Keep Mapping Current However, that initial warehouse mapping exercise is typically not the last, nor should it be. For starts, different seasonal conditions necessitate repeats of warehouse mapping exercises because the challenges to uniform conditions will predictably vary from one season to the next. What is more commonly overlooked is that ongoing changes to facilities require mapping anew as well. For example, shelves that were previously lightly packed that evolve into tightly packed inventory in ceiling-high packaging might in itself change the airflow from the initial conditions. Or, a new production process that requires more or less heat may be affecting conditions in the facility. Plant expansion is obviously a time to revisit the facility mapping, but is also sometimes overlooked. |
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Save Time in Data Collection On the other hand, taking humidity/temperature readings too often can also create significant burdens by adding data processing time. Typically, 15-minute intervals provide enough data to evaluate humidity/temperature trends because it takes a relatively long time for conditions to change in a room, and certainly in a large open production facility or warehouse. If one samples in one-minute intervals, one is generating 15 times the data to process; if one samples in 2.5-minute intervals, one is generating 6 times the data to process, if one is sampling every 10 minutes there is 1.5 times the data to process, and so forth. More frequent sampling is not making any meaningful contribution to data analysis but rather IS adding time to data processing. This is turn ties up computer resources and uses up staff time unnecessarily. For a more detailed discussion on how to appropriately scale data collection for temperature/humidity mapping, click here. |
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Streamlining Data Downloads There is now a wide range of displays in different types of humidity/temperature data loggers. Some allow one to see what the current conditions are without going through the bother of downloading data. Others will add to that a display of the minimum and maximum temperatures and/or humidity in pre-defined timeframe's that allow determination of out-of-range conditions at a glance. The premier type displays are somewhat larger, typically 4 – 5 inches wide, and are capable of providing graphical displays comparable to those formerly created on PCs after download and processing. The graph-at-a-glance type humidity/temperature data loggers obviously have potential to save an enormous amount of time and have the added advantage of making ample data available to a wide range of personnel.This information is critical for process and quality control purposes and needs to be accessible to personnel as they walk around the plant. If one prefers the downloading data route there are innovations here as well that can significantly impact the time required for temperature/humidity |
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monitoring. Thank the proliferation of digital cameras for spawning affordable flash memory cards that are now used in data loggers. These allow one to leave the logger in place and instead take the flash memory card to the PC for processing, just as one takes a flash card from a digital camera to process at a PC. These not only save the bother of moving loggers around but also enable an immediate reloading of a replacement flash card when one is removed, such that there is a negligible gap in data collection. These flash cards are very inexpensive, easy-to-obtain, commodity type items that are available in varying capacities. Flash card selection should be based on how often the downloading of data is desired or required by an application. Recent models of humidity/temperature data loggers allow for Ethernet connectivity. That means that one user can plug the logger into their Ethernet connection for data downloading and workers in a more remote areas can see the data as well. Better Options for Varied Applications The same trend we see of greater processing power in smaller sizes in
all portable electronic equipment is true of humidity/temperature data
loggers as well. There are now very compact loggers the size of a quarter
that are relatively inexpensive and ideal for tracking container conditions
during shipping. Summary
About the Author: Chris Sorensen is VP of Dickson Company
(www.dicksondata.com), which offers the
widest range of data loggers and chart recorders available in the world
for pharmaceutical and other applications. Inquiries can be directed to
dicksoncsr@dicksondata.com Copyright Carpe Diem Communications, Inc. Reprinted with
permission from PFQ magazine. |
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