01 September 2006 By:
R.D. McDowall
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The fundamental aim of any computerized system validation should be to define its intended use and then test it to demonstrate that it complies with specification.

01 June 2008 By:
R.D. McDowall
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You may work in a chromatography laboratory to quality standards but do you work to Good Laboratory Practice? Probably not...

01 March 2008 By:
R.D. McDowall
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The four eyes approach is a cornerstone of any quality system (GMP, GLP or ISO 17025): a first person performs a task and a second person checks it.

01 November 2007 By:
R.D McDowall
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Information from guidance documents used in clinical investigations can be very useful to help meet FDA regulations regarding computer security in analytical laboratories.

01 March 2007 By:
R.D. McDowall
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Users need to understand not only the operation of the computer system as required by their access privileges, but also the ethics and integrity required operating under any of the GMP or GLP quality systems.

01 May 2006 By:
R.D. McDowall
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The best parts of the GAMP laboratory system GPG are the life cycle
models for both development and implementation of computerized
laboratory systems.

01 March 2006 By:
Chris Burgess, R.D. McDowall
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Part 2 of the column explores using the right balance for the right job in the right way.

01 September 2005 By:
Jens Donath, R.D. McDowall
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The implementation and validation of a new site-wide chromatography data system for a major active pharmaceutical ingredient custom manufacturer provided the opportunity to map and optimize the GMP and ISO business processes to use electronic signatures effectively. This article describes the process optimization and how it integrates with the validation activities of the system. This overall approach provides substantial business benefits from the use of electronic signatures as evidenced by the savings resulting from process improvement and by the fact that the non-GMP laboratories implemented a similar process to analyse and approve results electronically.

Bob McDowall stresses the importance of using accurate and precise time and date stamps to ensure the integrity of the data and results generated by computerized systems in any chromatography laboratory.
