Laboratory Assistant & QC
Workplace: Malmö, Sweden
Expires: June 30, 2025
Join a growing pharmaceutical company in Halland as a Laboratory Assistant focusing on Quality Control using HPLC and UPLC technologies. This is a 3-month consulting assignment with potential extension, offering the chance to work with cutting-edge analytical equipment and contribute to method validation and quality assurance.
Main requirements:
  • Bachelor degree in Chemistry, Biomedical Analysis, Vocational College or similar.
  • Minimum of two years experience with HPLC and UPLC instruments.
  • Strong understanding of quality control procedures and laboratory best practices.
  • Ability to perform method validations and troubleshoot lab instruments.
  • Good organizational skills and strong attention to detail.
  • English fluency mandatory; Swedish language skills desirable.
  • Experience in regulated environments is a plus.
Responsibilities:
  • Perform quality control testing and validation of analysis methods, focusing on HPLC and UPLC.
  • Re-validate and optimize existing analysis methods to meet industry standards and internal requirements.
  • Maintain and calibrate HPLC/UPLC equipment to ensure accuracy and reliability.
  • Work closely with senior team members to troubleshoot and resolve technical issues.
  • Document test results and prepare detailed analytical reports as required.
Required hard skills:
  • Hands-on experience with HPLC and UPLC instruments.
  • Method validation techniques in analytical chemistry.
  • Laboratory calibration and maintenance.
  • Knowledge of quality control standards and laboratory best practices.
Recommended hard skills:
  • Experience working in regulated pharmaceutical or life science environments.
Soft skills:
  • Detail-oriented
  • Proactive
  • Good organizational skills
  • Collaboration and teamwork
  • Problem-solving abilities
Natural languages:
  • English (Proficient)
  • Swedish (Basic familiarity)
Cultural skills:
  • Adaptation to regulated industry standards
  • Team collaboration in scientific environments