Paperless Calibration
Bulging
filing cabinets or over-full hanging files are a common office scene.
But as far as calibration records are concerned, is the "paperless
office" taboo? Does Agilent's free Infoline service satisfy critical record requirements?
What do You Keep in Your Drawers ?
Most quality managers keep calibration results
and certificates in their drawers! From discussions that
have taken place with many people in industry whose responsibility
includes the control of test instruments, a filing cabinet full
of paper calibration evidence is an integral part of
the quality system -- without which audits would fail and the
business would crumble. But when pressed for a rationale for
such belief, three main reasons to maintain paper records emerge:
- They believe that auditors would not
accept any alternative
- They believe that product/quality certifiers or accreditation
bodies demand it
- It is historical; they have always done
it and it is a comfort factor.
Alternative Feared
During these discussions a potential alternative option based around
electronic records being retained by the calibration supplier, to
be provided electronically on demand, was met with a mixed reaction.
On one hand, the positive aspects of fewer papers to handle, file,
retain, refresh, retrieve, etc. were enthusiastically supported.
However, the conflicting dilemma that such a change might have an
impact on audit success tempered that initial enthusiasm. Equipment
managers' fundamental belief is that both ISO/IEC17025 and ISO9001 auditors would not recognize or be comfortable
with such a virtual record system. This fear alone would
deter them from seriously considering any such change.
This collective feedback formed the basis of a discussion between
Agilent in Britain and senior officials from the United
Kingdom Accreditation Service, the agency responsible for both accrediting
calibration/test labs and overseeing quality management system registrars.
The goal was to establish, for the record, whether UKAS would endorse
a paperless system. The outcome of this meeting is summarized in
a letter from the Technical Director
of UKAS, which summarized that the responsibility of the user
of calibration services (the customer)
"....is to be able to demonstrate to the assessor that
it can, and does when needed, obtain evidence of calibration and
that it has an effective records system enabling tracking back
of full calibration data and certification for the defined period."
This doesnt mean that records are necessarily kept locally
by the equipment-user in paper form but that they could, indeed,
be retained by the supplier of the service and provided when needed
at any time in the future. In most cases, the only data a company
needs in real-time relates to parameters found to be outside the
instruments specification when initially tested (on-receipt
status) so that a potential product-recall process may be invoked.
But even this doesnt need to be provided on paper -- it could
be made available to the customer via the Internet (e.g. e-mail
or a secure web server such as Agilent's Infoline) or through a variety of other electronic
means (CD-ROM, memory stick, etc.).
Control is Crucial not the Mechanism
Whichever medium is most appropriate, it is the evidence of control
that is imperative, not the evidence of paperwork as explained in the following extract from UKAS' letter:
"In principle, your customers would be able to contract
you to retain their calibration records; this arrangement would
then become part of their system for retention of records. UKAS
assessment of such a customer would address whether this system
provided access that was easy, quick and reliable and controlled
from the point of view of security, confidentiality and accuracy.
Assuming this to be so in practice then the system would be acceptable
to UKAS."
This alternative solution is, therefore, one which UKAS would support
provided that the customer and the supplier met some key requirements.
Those requirements were concisely detailed:
"The documentation of such records and certification
is acceptable in any form of medium, hard copy, electronic, etc.
provided that it is legible, dated, readily identifiable, retrievable,
secure and maintained in facilities that provide a suitable environment
to minimize deterioration or damage and to prevent loss."
Dispelling Reluctance
So, the voice of industry is clear. It would like to take advantage
of contemporary technology by contracting-out its data and certificate
storage requirements and, provided that their suppliers could satisfy
their needs (echoed by the needs of UKAS above), they are willing
to forego historical practices by trusting virtual documentation.
But the most significant reason that they are reluctant to take
this step is fear of audit failure.
Agilent Technologies believe that a major step forward would be
made if quality system and accreditation consultants and assessors
could advise their clients that, far from impeding audit success,
such a move could enhance it -- whilst at the same time saving
space, time and ultimately money for both the equipment owner and
calibration provider.
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