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<div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File: | <div style="float: left; margin: 0.5em 0.9em 0.4em 0em;">[[File:Fig2 Liscouski PlanDisruptLabOper2022.png|240px]]</div> | ||
'''"[[ | '''"[[LII:Planning for Disruptions in Laboratory Operations|Planning for Disruptions in Laboratory Operations]]"''' | ||
A high-level of productivity is something laboratory management wants and those working for them strive to achieve. However, what happens when reality trips us up? We found out when [[COVID-19]] appeared. This work from laboratory informatics veteran Joe Liscouski examines how [[laboratory]] operations can be organized to meet that disruption, as well as other disruptions we may have to face. Many of these changes, including the introduction of new technologies and changing attitudes about work, were in the making already but at a much slower pace. Over the years, productivity has had many measures, from 40 to 60 hour work weeks and piece-work to pounds of material processed to samples run, all of which comes from a manufacturing mind set. People went to work in an office, lab, or production site, did their work, put in their time, and went home. That was in the timeframe leading up to the 1950s and '60s. Today, in 2022, things have changed ... ('''[[LII:Planning for Disruptions in Laboratory Operations|Full article...]]''')<br /> | |||
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Revision as of 16:15, 10 October 2022
"Planning for Disruptions in Laboratory Operations"
A high-level of productivity is something laboratory management wants and those working for them strive to achieve. However, what happens when reality trips us up? We found out when COVID-19 appeared. This work from laboratory informatics veteran Joe Liscouski examines how laboratory operations can be organized to meet that disruption, as well as other disruptions we may have to face. Many of these changes, including the introduction of new technologies and changing attitudes about work, were in the making already but at a much slower pace. Over the years, productivity has had many measures, from 40 to 60 hour work weeks and piece-work to pounds of material processed to samples run, all of which comes from a manufacturing mind set. People went to work in an office, lab, or production site, did their work, put in their time, and went home. That was in the timeframe leading up to the 1950s and '60s. Today, in 2022, things have changed ... (Full article...)
Recently featured: