Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Bika Health pilot in Suriname

A project to pilot Bika Health 0.2 interfaced to OpenERP and EMR Medical on a project at the University Hospital in Paramaribo, Suriname has been started
From a post by Chris Larsen at the Bika OS Health LIMS discussion group
Due to a series of fortunate circumstances, we have been able to close ranks with the Bika group, as well as the OpenERP/Medical developers in order to launch both applications in the course of a pilot project with the Academisch Ziekenhuis (University Hospital) in Paramaribo, Suriname
As the above programs are Python-based, we even hope to make them talk to each other, which would provide an important step towards a reasonably holistic framework for health facilities
This holds even more true, as the OpenERP backbone of Medical offers great potential to facilitate everyday health facility management
A test platform is nearing completion. Interfacing the laboratory instruments will be the only major customisation to Bika Health required for the pilot. Functional and design discussion continues at the Health group
The interface to OpenMRS completed earlier will be complemented with interfaces to Medical and OpenERP, open source medical and enterprise record keeping and management systems respectively
The Bika developer team thanks all the participants, Health group members, Medical, the Academisch Ziekenhuis and Chris for glueing the project together, it is difficult to contain our excitement
Project Concept Paper: Piloting Bika, OpenERP and Medical with the Academisch Ziekenhuis in Paramaribo (Suriname)
Bika Health 
(as posted on Bika Lab Systems)

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Bika LIMS 2.2.1 Released

Although the full announcement with Press Release, updated demo, updated project pages on www.bikalabs.com are still wip, here already a quick mention that the files are already available for download from SF.net:

  • Bika Package; download this if you want to upgrade you LIMS and already have all dependent products.
  • Bika Product Bundle; download this if you don't have the dependent products, all are included in the bundle.
  • Browse all available files and archive types
Here the installation instructions. User Manual is also wip, but most of it is already covered in the Bika LIMS 2 manual.If you want to set-up the Bika Calendar, this manual might also come in handy.
For any discussions about the system;Bika User list (archive) for all installation issues, as well as the Developer's List (archive) and the Bika OS LIMS Analysis & Design List (archive)

So What's New?

Bika LIMS 2.2.0 Changes:
  • Attachments permitted on analysis requests and analyses
  • Worksheet resequencing, and sort order for worksheet analysis selection
  • Worksheet deletion only available for open worksheets
  • Portlet to provide export of analysis services and analysis profiles
  • Requirement for unique analysis service names, analysis service keywords, instrument import keywords and analysis profile keywords enforced.
  • Report headings and formats standardized across different reports
  • Analysis Request import alternative layout provided with selection, including profiles
  • Progress bar introduced for long running processes
  • Updated interface with Softline Pastel (South African Accounting package)
Bika LIMS 2.2.1 Changes (minor update):
  • StandardSampleUID was omitted from the StandardAnalysis object

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Truth Behind the Hype Behind Softare-as-a-Service (SaaS) LIMS - Part One

I was planning to only post monthly updates of interesting articles we come across and publish within our reads folder, but after reading this article from LIMSletter, I just couldn't wait.

The whole article is a worthwhile read, but the highlights for me are the following snippets :

“According to industry research, 31.1% of software projects are cancelled before they are completed. Of those software projects which have been completed, over half (52.7%) have taken twice as long or have cost twice as much as originally expected. When on-premise software applications are fully deployed, the maintenance and management costs can be ten times the original license fee.”(1) Indeed, the failure rate of commercial LIMS solutions is commonly estimated to be as high as 60% by industry analysts such as Strategic Directions and ArcWeb."

“More than 80% of scientific labs do not use a professional LIMS. Not because they don’t want to, but because implementing a LIMS has been too difficult, time consuming, and costly. That ‘perfect storm’ of daunting factors includes commercial-off-the-shelf LIMS as well as home-grown solutions.” Instead, according to Kent, most labs still rely on informal systems, such as paper-based notebooks, Excel spreadsheets, or tracking systems cobbled together using tools such as Microsoft Access or FileMaker Pro"

"One LIMS vendor has stated that “the main difference between a subscription-hosted LIMS and a direct purchase ‘on-site LIMS’ is the initial cost and total cost of ownership (TCO)”.This is not the full story. The most critical difference lies not in how it is priced, but in the underlying code and how the SaaS LIMS was developed."

"In order for a SaaS LIMS to succeed, not only must the SaaS vendor invest in a comprehensive SDP, but they must also ensure the implementation of security technologies and certification programs that govern data center operations and personnel. These certification programs can include SAS 70, ISO standards, HIPAA, Sarbanes-Oxley, etc. The Statement on Auditing Standards (SAS) No. 70, for instance, is the authoritative auditing standard that judges a service organization’s controls and safeguards over their information technology and related processes. It is important that the SaaS LIMS vendor be able to produce SAS 70 service auditor reports which validate that the service offering conforms to the guidance requirements and thus delivers a secure service."

"Fortunately, if the service does not meet the lab’s needs, it can be cancelled. The burden of success rests not with the customer but with the SaaS vendor to deliver reliable, scalable, secure services. This enables the laboratory to focus on the attributes of the SaaS solution and determine how well those features and functions meet the lab’s needs, and not on implementation, management and support."

This resonated strongly with us at Bika Lab Systems, as we have been offering SaaS since inception, as our LIMS has always been web-based rather than web-enabled. And we offer it for all our products; Bika LIMS, Bika Interlab, Bika Wine, Bika CMS and soon Bika Water.

This article has also been published in our Reads folder, which is RSS enabled.
More about Bika Lab Systems' SaaS offerings.