The embodiments of the present disclosure generally relate to handling sensitive materials and products during manufacture. More particularly, the embodiments herein relate to verifying the competence of operators at various stages of the manufacturing process.
The Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) regulates, among other things, good manufacturing practices for pharmaceutical companies. For example, guidelines for personnel qualifications are defined in 21 CFR §211.25, whereby “each person engaged in the manufacture, processing, packing, or holding of a drug product shall have education, training, and experience, or any combination thereof, to enable that person to perform the assigned functions.” The assigned functions are to be performed “in such a manner as to provide assurance that the drug product has the safety, identity, strength, quality, and purity that it purports or is represented to possess.” In regulated industries such as pharmaceuticals and food, it is important to enforce competence and certification checks throughout the manufacturing process.
According to quality standards of the International Organization for Standardization (“ISO”) and FDA regulations, companies are required to execute and document employee training. These requirements ensure employees understand their duties within the company and are familiar with the industry guidelines. Well-managed training programs minimize the risk of noncompliance and improve product quality.
In the manufacturing of pharmaceuticals, a manufacturing run is identified as a batch in which various operations are executed on the batch at various stages. At each stage, certification/competence requirements are monitored to ensure that FDA regulations are being adhered to. Some of the various stages of manufacture may include, for example, material consumption recording, material yield recording, resource usage recording, quality sample collection, quality results, process parameters recording, material dispensing, etc.
The present disclosure describes systems, methods, and associated software for verifying the competence of an operator in a manufacturing facility. In one embodiment, among many, a system for verifying operator competence includes one or more input/output devices, which are configured to receive information from a user and provide information to the user. The system also includes a processing device, which is configured to enable the user to set up a competence profile of an operator in the manufacturing facility. The processing device is also configured to enable the user to define jobs related to handling sensitive material at multiple material handling stages in the manufacturing facility. In addition, the processing is configured to assign training to the operator as needed to meet industry guidelines and enable the user to define competence levels required at each multiple material handling stage.
Other features, advantages, and implementations of the present disclosure, not expressly disclosed herein, will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following detailed description and accompanying drawings. It is intended that such implied implementations of the present disclosure be included herein.
The components of the following figures are illustrated to emphasize the general principles of the present disclosure and are not necessarily drawn to scale. Reference characters designating corresponding components are repeated as necessary throughout the figures for the sake of consistency and clarity.
In a conventional manufacturing plant, the manufacturing process is carried out in various stages and typically a paper document accompanies a product batch during manufacture, where the document can contain manual checks along the process. For example, when a batch is initiated on the manufacturing shop floor, a supervisor identifies the operators who can work on portions of the manufacturing process based on their certification and competence.
However, according to the embodiments described herein, the present disclosure defines automated systems and methods for verifying operator certification in a manufacturing process. In order for manufacturing to pass on to the next stage, automated certification and competence checks are required. Although examples of manufacturing are described herein, the present disclosure also applies to any various types of competence checks in which sensitive matter is handled at various stages along a process. In particular, the material, objects, substances, products, etc., handled by the operators at the various stages can include any sensitive material, products, byproducts, precious materials, hazardous materials, or other matter or product that requires special handling. Although many of the examples described in the present disclosure pertain to the handling of pharmaceuticals, it should be noted that the embodiments discussed herein can apply to any type of sensitive material.
Prior to the manufacturing process, an administrator can set up competence and certification requirements for the various stages along the material handling process. With a valid set up, certification and competence requirements can be enforced throughout the manufacturing process to ensure that operators handling the products are properly authorized. The administrator can also specify whether an override of the operator competence requirements can be allowed, where such an override allows bypassing one or more checkpoints when the current operator does not have valid certification or credentials to perform the task. This override can be performed when the person giving an override has the required competence or certifications to perform the task.
The automated methods described herein provide strict enforcement of certification and competence requirements based on up to date information in the system. This will eliminate human error or communication issues that can occur in a manual system. For example, if a production process is started and operators are identified, it is possible that certification requirements can change. In conventional manufacturing processes, even though a supervisor should revalidate assignments and communicate new policies to the operators, some processes might still complete without enforcing the new requirements. With the systems described herein, an automated verification of operator competence will automatically stop the operator from proceeding with an unauthorized transaction. Furthermore, this solution can provide a more stringent implementation of regulatory requirements.
With the automated operator certification system in place in the manufacturing process, an administrative user can define or set up multiple competence and certification requirements at various levels of material handling. Also, the operator certification system allows the administrative user to enable override ability at various stages where appropriate. With such an automated system, a record of the process manufacturing stages can be stored electronically and a report presented to management. Administrators can easily adopt and enforce new competence and certification checks throughout the manufacturing process, allowing manufacturing companies to enforce certification requirements uniformly across multiple plants. Management and/or auditors can easily review a log or record of the multiple certification stages and see any overrides that have been made during the process.
In the embodiment of
Memory device 14 may include one or more internally fixed storage units, removable storage units, and/or remotely accessible storage units. The storage units can be configured to store information, data, instructions, and/or software code. The storage units may include any combination of volatile memory, such as random access memory (“RAM”), dynamic RAM (“DRAM”), etc., and/or non-volatile memory, such as read only memory (“ROM”), electrically erasable programmable ROM (“EEPROM”), flash memory, etc.
Operator competence verification program 22 stored in memory device 14 can be executed by processing device 12. Various logical instructions or commands may be included in operator competence verification program 22 for setting up competence profiles for different operators. Operator competence verification program 22 can also maintain and assign training/education information for operators to determine when additional training may be needed. In addition, operator competence verification program 22 can define the competence requirements at various stages of the manufacturing process and even establish conditions in which these competence requirements can be overridden. Furthermore, operator competence verification program 22 can log or record information regarding the verification process at the various stages and whether an override has been requested and/or granted. A report of the verification log can be presented to management in order that management can monitor the manufacturing process to ensure compliance to applicable guidelines and rules.
The embodiments of operator competence verification program 22 described in the present disclosure can be implemented in hardware, software, firmware, or a combination thereof. When implemented in software or firmware, operator competence verification program 22 is stored in memory device 14 and executed by processing device 12. Alternatively, when implemented in hardware, operator competence verification program can be implemented in processing device 12 using discrete logic circuitry, an application specific integrated circuit (“ASIC”), a programmable gate array (“PGA”), a field programmable gate array (“FPGA”), or any combination thereof.
Operator competence verification program 22 or other software or logic code including executable logical instructions as described herein, can be embodied in computer-readable media for execution by any suitable processing device, such as processing device 12. The computer-readable media as described herein can include one or more suitable physical media components that can store the software, programs, or computer code for a measurable length of time.
I/O devices 16 may include input mechanisms such as keyboards, keypads, cursor control devices, or other data entry devices. The input mechanisms may be used for entering information in memory device 14. For example, to define override information at a particular stage of manufacture, a user can enter the information using any suitable input mechanisms. I/O devices 16 also include output devices such as computer monitors, audio output devices, printers, or other peripheral devices for communicating information to the user. Another example of an output device may include a display screen or report printing mechanism for communicating verification checks and overrides to management.
Network interface 18 allows competence verification system 10 to communicate with other devices via any type of network associated with the corporation, enterprise, or manufacturing facility. For example, competence verification system 10 may be in communication with an enterprise resource planning (“ERP”) system or other type of integrated system of the corporation.
Individual competence setup module 34 uses the updated information in databases 26, 28, and 30 to determine and establish each individual operator's competence. Therefore, in this respect, competence can be considered to be a combination of an operator's education, training, and experience, which, according to 21 CFR §211.25, is a measure of a person's credentials for performing assigned functions in the manufacturing process.
GUI 32 may include any combination or number of user interfaces, communicated via I/O devices 16, for receiving information from a user and presenting information to the user. As discussed in more detail below, some user interfaces can be used for set up with respect to individual competence setup module 34. Some interfaces can be used for defining jobs and positions with respect to job/position defining module 36, some can be used for assigning training and education with respect to training/education assignment module 38, and some for defining competence levels and overrides with respect to competence/override defining module 40. GUI 32 may represent or include multiple graphical user interfaces as described with respect to
Information is entered in the Competence column 56 and Proficiency Level column 58 based on the competencies that the particular individual already possesses. Different competencies can be based on acquiring certain degrees from colleges or universities, specialty studies, certification courses, etc. As an example, a person competent to dispense certain materials may have certification or training on how to handle materials, include such skills as how a material should be picked up, how it should be unpacked, protective gear to be used when handling the material, etc. Also, the person may be given training with respect to the consequences when the specific handling techniques are not followed.
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It should be understood that the steps, processes, or operations described herein may represent any module or code sequence that can be implemented in software or firmware. In this regard, these modules and code sequences can include commands or instructions for executing specific logical steps, processes, or operations within physical components. It should further be understood that one or more of the steps, processes, and/or operations described herein may be executed substantially simultaneously or in a different order than explicitly described, as would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art.
The embodiments described herein represent a number of implementations or examples and are not intended to necessarily limit the present disclosure to any specific embodiments. Instead, various modifications can be made to these embodiments as would be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art. Any such modifications are intended to be included within the spirit and scope of the present disclosure and protected by the following claims.