| Company |
Category |
| EtQ Inc. |
Managaing Your Risk Has It Rewards In today's Quality Management systems, the ability to control and correct processes is key to maintaining a high level of compliance within an organization. How can organizations effectively measure events from an objective standpoint to assess the overall impact? The answer is Risk Assessment and Risk Mitigation. |
| EtQ Inc. |
Beyond CAPA: Using Risk Assessment to Streamline Your Quality System CAPA has Become a Catchall. With all the processes associated with managing a quality and compliance management system, corrective action and preventive action (CAPA) is a prominent feature. In many cases, if an event is found in the system, a CAPA is generated. No matter the scope or severity, CAPA is the ultimate catchall for events in the system. |
| EtQ Inc. |
Uncovering the Hidden Factory by Integration Your Business Systems This white paper demonstrates how integrating your ERP/MES and QMS system can help solve the mystery of this expensive, wasteful hidden factory. |
| EtQ Inc. |
Integration Management Connects Key Business Systems to Quality This paper will discuss the concept of specifically integrating a QMS with enterprise business systems in order to create visibility into status of quality, transfer information to and from these systems, and reduce product defects and process noncompliance, as a result increasing overall efficiency. |
| Multisorb Technologies |
Pseudoempirical Modeling Article discusses how pseudoempirical modeling ensures effective drug packaging. Formulation chemists put a great deal of ingenuity into today’s pharmaceutical products. Even so, formulations today are often less stable than their predecessors. Pseudoempirical modeling helps drug makers quickly determine the means by which they can maintain a drug’s chemical and physical characteristics over time. |
| Multisorb Technologies |
Successful Pharmaceutical Packaging Pharmaceuticals are subject to a variety of degradation pathways that compromise drug safety and shelf-life. By far the greatest degradation is caused by hydrolysis and oxidation. However, other mechanisms include racemization, photodegradation, elimination, and complexation. A number of active packaging components... |