Service availability.
Measured and reported with auditable metrics. These are not declarative objectives — they are contractual commitments with documentation to back them up.
24x7 operation with audited service level agreements. Dedicated team, proven procedures. Because the continuity of healthcare delivery admits no pauses — and we organise ourselves to guarantee it.
"24x7 support" can mean many things. The difference lies in what actually happens at three in the morning.
What a mission-critical clinical system needs is concrete: when something fails in the small hours, someone with context, permissions and tools is available in minutes. Not in hours, not in the morning, not when circumstances permit. That is what it means to sustain a truly critical system — and what we have been doing since we opened.
Measured and reported with auditable metrics. These are not declarative objectives — they are contractual commitments with documentation to back them up.
Severity is formally classified and response times are tailored to actual clinical impact. An incident blocking diagnosis in emergency care is handled in minutes. A minor incident follows its own course with its own commitment.
Responding quickly is necessary but not sufficient. You must resolve within the agreed window — and for complex cases, have an operational alternative running while you work on the definitive solution.
RTO and RPO defined per service. Procedures tested in real drills, not just documented.
When something fails, lack of information is part of the problem. We have communication protocols during incidents because managing an incident includes keeping the customer informed.
"An incident detected in time is not an incident."
People with deep system context, authority to act, and on-call rotation designed to sustain attention without burning out the team. Continuous operations are organised, not improvised.
Calibrated alerts — not so many they're ignored, not so few that diagnosis arrives too late. We detect problems before the user does.
Procedures documented by scenario, kept current and tested. When someone connects at 3 AM they don't improvise — they follow a procedure that can be reviewed carefully before it's needed.
Every significant incident ends in structured analysis of the failure and the response. The aim is not to point fingers — it's to learn and not repeat it.
The team that sustains operations is the same team that understands the system from the inside. Who built it, who maintains it, who operates it — all within the same organisation. That closed loop is what makes a clinical system sustainable long term, not just deliverable.
If you have a mission-critical system whose current operations are not guaranteed at the level its criticality demands — let's talk. That's what we've been doing since 1995.