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Preserving Water Quality at
the Rijnland
Water Board
By purchasing an
advanced Laboratory Information Management System the Rijnland Water
Board were awarded greater flexibility in its work, creating the basis
for making a dream come true.
The
Netherlands has dozens of water boards distributed throughout its
provinces. Water boards are government organizations responsible
for managing the quality of surface water. In other words, their job is
to keep low-lying areas from flooding and to ensure that water presents
no risks to the well being of people, animals and the environment. The
monitoring this involves requires the conducting of chemical, physical
and bacteriological analyses in its laboratories. These laboratory
findings serve as input for the management and quality control policies
pursued by the water board and other levels of government. It is for
this reason that they consider the provision of quality, efficient
operations and good communication so important. Within this framework,
the introduction of a comprehensive information system at its laboratory
was an opportunity to continue improvement of other processes at the
same time – an operation resulting in considerable changes for almost
everyone in the organization.
The parties most
directly involved with the Rijnland Water Board are its approximately 60
“internal” customers. These are water purification plants, project
managers and their staff, licensing authorities and supervisory civil
servants. In 1987 an AS400 computer system was customized with a LIMS,
to provide these parties direct access to data. It was later found –
once the focus on environmental needs and the need to improve and manage
the quality of the laboratory increased so dramatically – that this kind
of customizing failed to promote flexibility. The number of analyses
grew, as did the number of quality improvement projects. Time and again,
the customized software had to be adjusted to meet these demands, and it
sometimes took months to accomplish these changes. In 1999, it was
finally concluded that additional maintenance would not be that much
less expensive than purchasing a new package.
Requirements
The decision to buy
a completely new LIMS package was also an opportunity for management to
propose new objectives for other related activities. Here was a chance
to realize a dream they had had for a long time: an organization that
was not restricted in its operations by the limitations of a software
system and that could also operate more efficiently. The list they then
proposed included the following main requirements:
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Connecting the new
LIMS to the existing AS400 mainframe. The internal customers would
have to retain their access to an enormous amount of data and
histories stored here. The transfer of data could take place during a
later phase. |
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It would have to
have a comprehensive module at its disposal to plan sampling and
analysis processes. Having these processes run more smoothly would
reduce the number of hours employees were working. |
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The system would
have to be very user friendly and be able to carry out many kinds of
checks automatically so that responsibilities could be delegated to
people lower in the organization’s structure. |
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Its service would
have to be extended to simplify and speed up plans, spur-of-the-moment
responses, interim reports, trend analyses and management reports.
Anyone preparing these documents would also have to be able to
determine how they would look and not be limited in this regard by the
system. |
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A direct
connection between instruments and the LIMS would be required so that
analysis findings could be automatically entered, checked and
reported. |
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The package would
need to include a financial model to calculate costs and draw up
offers and invoices. |
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Making any desired
changes in the system would need to be done quickly and offer the
possibility of developing these within the organization. |
Due to this last
requirement in particular, the Rijnland Water Board decided in early
2000 not to purchase the same package being purchased by their
colleagues at other water boards. The most important factor in this
decision was that Rijnland did not want anything to do with waiting for
software changes that would have to be done through the supplier and
after consulting with other similar users. This was the kind of
straightjacket they wanted to eliminate at almost any cost since it
would needlessly slow down the dream they wanted to realise. Instead,
the project team decided on the StarLIMS package from Lab-Data
Management Systems.
Implementation
Experiences
The months that
followed were used to design and set up the new package. Its
implementation took place in phases. To delegate responsibilities to
staff in lower positions within the organization required a lot of
discussion with these direct users. Small groups were taken aside to
examine many of their daily activities, especially in terms of how these
activities could be improved by using the LIMS. Since the users often
made decisions as based on their specific knowledge, everyone became
very much aware that everything he/she did could be of importance to
others. Their involvement with colleagues in other teams increased as
well. On the other side of the coin was the fact that the managers were
thus required to spend much more of their supervisory time in these
activities than had been estimated.
The intensive
cooperation with the supplier’s specialists, meanwhile, was fantastic.
The young, enthusiastic specialists knew a lot about the organization
and were good at spotting deficiencies in the thinking patterns of their
client. Their can-do motto was, “Every difficult question is simply a
challenge, and nothing is impossible.”
Changes
The new LIMS led to
major desired changes in the organization.Management
was particularly affected during the first phase of implementation – a
double system was in operation, certain forms of resistance among users
had to be overcome, and management was suddenly confronted with many
more management tools, some of which were unfamiliar to them. Now
however, not even six months after making the final switch, the benefits
are becoming apparent. The first complete annual logistics plan was
ready in 14 days. Before, this had taken a quarter of a man-year to
accomplish. It was specialized work because a good plan depended on a
tremendous number of factors such as the capacities of equipment, the
workforce available, transport available, etc. If the person
specializing in any of these areas was sick, there was a big problem. In
case of disasters, more analyses would have to be conducted as well – a
situation sometimes accompanied by peak workloads at the laboratory. The
new planning module keeps track of all these factors automatically.
Plans are thus much easier to make, and extra time can be predicted or
peak workloads leveled out sooner. And management reports can be
generated in all kinds of ways to shed more light on all processes for
the short and long-term future.
The technical
changes being made at the water board make little difference to its
customers. They still have access to their data in the same way as
before since this data is being provided by the LIMS in the background.
What they do notice, however, is the more efficient planning and the
more detailed ways of reporting information. At their request, any of
the 500 to 600 measuring points can be sampled at fixed intervals, on
fixed dates or at a certain frequency that they determine themselves.
With this data, Rijnland’s LIMS draws up a measuring plan and, if
desired, an offer. Between measuring intervals, customers receive a
progress report earlier than they did before and can use it as needed to
make adjustments. This one-on-one approach to customers will be further
extended during 2003.
For
the ten sample collectors, dealing with the new planning module
was a major change. Due to improved planning, an overlap in sampling no
longer occurs, so their potential for carrying out activities can be
better coordinated with that of the laboratory. Right in line with the
expansion of responsibilities at lower levels is the fact that the
sample collectors’ tasks, too, are being increased; meanwhile their risk
of making errors is minimized. They receive work lists that indicate
what material they have to take with them and how the sample is to be
collected. They take the measurements, record the field observations and
now maintain the field measuring equipment at indicated times. They
enjoy their work more and feel more involved as they have a greater
variety of tasks and responsibilities.
Obviously, the work
being done by the lab personnel has changed as well. Instead of
assigning a certain person the boring job of entering all the findings,
each analyst enters this data him/herself. The lab personnel also have a
better picture of which activities still have to be completed and a
better idea of the status of the samples still being processed. Since
the StarLIMS can also access historic data and links exist between
sampling points and findings, the system can decide automatically, as
based on any dramatic changes, whether an analysis has to be repeated.
Historical data can also be utilized to provide the proper method and
sequence of analysis. If a high concentration of chloride is found, for
example, another method should be used to determine chemical oxygen
consumption than when the chloride concentration is low. When dealing
with samples where this may occur (as known by previous measurements),
it would therefore be better to measure the chloride level first and
then establish the method for measuring chemical oxygen consumption. In
other cases, such an approach would be unnecessary. Lims Software
Manager,Wim de Mooij
Financial accounting
is also involved in the changes resulting from the LIMS. Cost price
calculations are now simple routine procedures, and offers are generated
completely by computer. These capabilities may be extended in the future
with the addition of automatic invoicing. Ultimately, the costs of the
laboratory (about three million euros a year) will also have to be
charged somewhere.
Within
the brief time that the system has been fully operational, people have
come to realize its indispensability for accomplishing the daily tasks
engaged in by almost every work group at the water board. Even so, there
are yet countless plans for putting it to even more beneficial use.
Besides the instruments currently linked to the LIMS, the remaining
instruments will be soon linked to it. All measurement data and
instrument parameters will then be transferred automatically to the LIMS
– a move that will further exclude human error and improve the
tractability of findings. Management plans to continue arranging the
organization’s qualities and achievements in line with its proposed
objectives and to become quicker at anticipating the many changes the
future is sure to bring. The dream is becoming a reality. At the same
time, it is also being realized with the conviction that the current
LIMS will develop along with any changes the future has in store. Until
now, the can-do motto is being completely substantiated.
This is an edited
version of an article published in the Dutch magazine Chemisch Weekblad,
October 2000
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