Supply chain
management is the process of efficiently integrating manufacturers, suppliers
and distributors to accurately meet customer demand. It can be divided into two
parts: inventory management and distribution. In healthcare, the three major
participants are Product Manufacturers, Purchasers like GPO’s and Healthcare
providers like hospitals. It is represented by the figure below:
Manufacturers
make products, GPO’s act as third-party negotiators on behalf of healthcare
providers but are funded by the administration fees paid by the manufacturer,
based on a percent of sales. This is the traditional way of a supply chain in
healthcare. Many hospitals are now coming up with different methods to save
costs as described in an example below.
Hospital
care and healthcare services account for almost half of nation’s expenditures.
According to another research study, supply chain management may account up to
40% of the cost of providing care and therefore it is essential that inventory
is managed in a better way which can save about 14% of the entire healthcare
cost. (1)
Adding to
the complexity is that hospitals cannot make purchasing decisions solely based
on cost. They must align with physicians and staff preferences to identify
products for best outcomes. It is necessary for supply chain managers at
hospitals to take physician preferences into consideration, with new medical
devices coming into the market every year, physicians and staff may prefer
certain devices that would allow them to be most productive. So to get
real-time feedback from staff will be helpful to ensure that supply chain managers
order the necessary devices and maintain the appropriate inventory level.
An example
of a hospital that used non-traditional method to save costs was Mercy Health
System. They streamlined their inventory and distribution process and created a
new supply chain management division called Resource Optimization and
Innovation (ROi). They reduced their dependence on GPO’s and created their own
GPO that would purchase directly from suppliers. They also shipped products
from their supplier warehouses directly to hospitals thus removing distributors
from their chain. This resulted in having $153M revenue in excess. (2)
This example
gives rise to various thoughts like will hospitals now have to come up with
their own GPO’s to save costs? What advanced methods can be used to better
manage inventory without affecting patient care?
References:
1. 1.Better inventory management systems
can reduce operating room costs –www.sciencedaily.com
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