In my search for resources to help me begin to gain an appreciation of how
order and inventory management are addressed in health care (particularly on the
level of large systems) I stumbled on a working paper by Manuel D.Rossetti, Ph.D., P.E., Professor of Industrial Engineering at The
University of Arkansas. Inventory Management Issues in Health Care Supply
Chains [1] is a concise and approachable article that describes the
current state of the health care value chain, problems with the current model (where
opportunities for streamlining to the benefit of the health system might exist)
and ways in which these problems might be mitigated.
Rossetti looks briefly at the two ends of the spectrum, e.g. Mercy Health
System in St. Louis, comprised of 31 hospitals across 4 states [2] which
manages its warehousing and in-system shipping entirely in-house thereby
cutting overhead from distributors, and the Nebraska Medical Center, a single
hospital which outsources its inventory management entirely to Cardinal Health,
a very large ($103 billion) healthcare supply chain company. [3] He then goes
on to survey the literature from the past decade or so, and finally suggests
topics for future investigation.
This paper is a nice survey of current thinking in the field of health care
supply chain management and is an excellent introduction for anyone wondering
what kind of infrastructure is behind their physician or nurse’s ability to
reach into a cabinet for a needed item at any given time.
As an aside, it is worth taking a look at the 2011 Healthcare
Supply Chain Top 25, wherein Gartner “strives to identify
organizations that use their supply chains to improve the patient care
experience.”[4]
Question:
Hospitals need to stock consumable items across a broad cost-range, e.g.
alcohol prep pads costing pennies or less per unit to teeny-tiny drug-eluting
stents for your plugged coronary arteries costing more than $1000 each. How do
they optimize ordering and inventory so that the overhead for items across the cost
range is optimized? Remember that a “stock-out” condition for a stent could be
devastating or lethal for a patient who presents acutely with a heart attack.
Delivery the next morning before 8 a.m. won’t cut it.
References:
[1] Rossetti, M.D., (June 5 2008). Inventory Management Issues in Health Care
Supply Chains http://www.uark.edu/~rossetti/reports/healthcare_supply_chain_rep.pdf
accessed 10 September, 2012.
[2] Mercy Health System website, http://www.mercy.net/newsroom-mercy-quick-facts
accessed 10 September 2012.
[3] Cardinal Health website http://ir.cardinalhealth.com/ accessed
10 September 2012.
[4] Blake, B., O’Daffer, E., et
al. 9 (30 November 2011). The Healthcare Supply Chain Top 25 for 2011 http://www.gartner.com/resources/227200/227253/the_healthcare_supply_chain__227253.pdf
accessed 10 September 2011
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