In the ophthalmic cannula forming industry, pain points persist in the areas of ergonomic and operator safety, consistency, quality, profitability, and efficiency. But if you are working with the right automation partner, many of these common issues can be eliminated.
Operator safety and ergonomics are two major concerns when manufacturing sharp devices because operators are continually at risk of getting poked, cut, or even seriously injured. And if you have an operator frequently loading materials and then pushing a trigger button or operating a two-handed switch, those repetitive motions can be tied to carpal tunnel and other ergonomic challenges that lead to workers' compensation claims.
Humans can also unintentionally inject organic matter contamination into the manufacturing process. Or perhaps an employee is shaky from having too much coffee on Monday morning, and they may not load raw materials into the system the same way every time. Humans need to be trained, and they need breaks and get sick, they show up late for work, and they occasionally quit.
This can be a win-win for the employees and the company because automation can mean moving employees to higher-value tasks for manufacturing employees, allowing them to focus on things that aren't going to expose them to risks. By shifting these individuals to higher-skilled tasks, you can actually increase skilled labor jobs because of improved output and the ability to plan future production in the facility due to improved reliability. Here is a customer who found that to be true for their facility!
When a cannula gets inserted into a hub to be glued, there can be variations in the cannula tube length and the distance that it is inserted. Humans can compensate for these variations, but in order to get an exact geometry, a human must manually position everything in the forming die.
Variations in the raw materials also lead to variations in the finished product, and if your product deals with life-altering surgeries, then those variations are not acceptable.
A manufacturer is tasked with producing a product that falls within a customer's parameters, so if a human manufacturing employee can influence a geometry such that it falls outside of the required specs, and it isn’t caught in a downstream post-inspection, then the customer is more likely to have quality defects.
Process control systems can perform quality testing throughout a production line, and must be a high priority if using them means they remove defects of quality from a line.
The level of quality control that an automated system can reach could never be reached using humans alone. An automated system can perform quality testing throughout a production line, and will regulate production metrics, create and send you data, remove defects from a production line, and ensure that each product meets the quality inspection parameters.
In part two, we will continue to address common problems with manual vs. automated medical device assembly operations including changeover procedure headaches, up and downstream processing for cannula-forming operations, and how to make your life easier with automation!