Reduction of Cosmetic Defects Due to Criteria Misalignment at a Medical Device Manufacturing Line Using DMAIC Methodology
Resumen
For the last few years, the economy of
Puerto Rico has been negatively affected,
increasing the operational cost of the industries in
the Island. The Pharma / Medical Device industry
is not excluded of this situation. In addition,
regulatory agencies have been increasing their
requirements and conditions that enforce activities
to ensure that the products or devices being
manufactured meets or exceeds the expectations of
clients and regulatory agencies across the world
and to protect the public health. In this challenging
business environment is essential for the industry to
invest in new equipment and technologies to
address the required corrective and preventive
actions to ensure the quality and efficacy of the
goods to be manufactured. All this factors makes
Pharma and Medical Devices companies to reduce
and/or eliminate their unnecessary scrap to
maintain competitive costs. Companies focus on
production efficiencies and often drive attention to
inefficiencies due to scrap or reworks that are
performed during the manufacturing process. Lean
Six Sigma Methodology is focused on business and
process improvements based on decrease of
process variation, waste elimination, process
improvement and customer satisfaction. This
project has been developed under the Lean Six
Sigma principles and using DMAIC five-step
approach, in order to identify opportunities to
enable the company to reduce cosmetic defects at
the neuromodulation manufacturing line at
MPROC Juncos.
Key Terms - Cosmetic Defects, DMAIC, Lean
Six Sigma, Medical Devices.