Healthcare systems, governments and distributors must create a more responsive and resilient healthcare supply chain to contend with future disease outbreaks. By Patricia Birch, Peter Borden and Pari Sanghavi
The U.S. healthcare supply chain has been caught off-guard by the impact of the novel coronavirus. Shortages have ranged from personal protective equipment (PPE) to pharmaceuticals to ICU beds in some cities. For instance, large healthcare supply distributors warned customers about historic back-order rates and low inventory. Several reportedly turned to allocation, or partial fulfillment, of orders for COVID-19-related drugs. Yet some states dismantled unused temporary tent hospitals erected to handle overflow, while others shipped their unneeded ventilators to harder-hit locations or back to the national stockpile. Meanwhile, supplies required to test for COVID-19 remain in short supply. The general inability to successfully forecast and meet demand for supplies during the pandemic has been painfully apparent. Clearly, healthcare systems, government agencies and large supply distributors must create a more responsive and resilient healthcare supply chain if countries are to contend effectively with future pandemics. Some change will likely be forced on the industry, as major suppliers in India and China restrict exports of key ingredients and products to meet their own needs. Federal legislators also are investigating the impact of relying on imported medical supplies. Instead of waiting for rules and regulations, the healthcare industry can over the next few years take advantage of the business and cultural changes accelerated by COVID-19 to rethink what medical supplies are and how to manage them. Increased automation in manufacturing and logistics and more at-home and virtual care are creating new options for building more distributed, resilient healthcare supply chain networks.
Artificial intelligence (AI)-based technologies and healthcare data interoperability will align to enable timely, accurate supply forecasts to fill networks with the right goods at the right time. To accomplish these goals, and structure a more digitized, resilient healthcare supply chain, the industry must make these shifts:
The industry will have opportunities to test these shifts as COVID-19 vaccines begin to be manufactured and distributed into 2021 and beyond. By applying the hard lessons taught by the pandemic about the need to forecast demand, inject resiliency and creativity into manufacturing and design, and expand thinking about access to care, the industry will be fully on-guard for the next global health crisis. This article was written by Patricia Birch, Senior Vice-President & Global Practice Leader, Healthcare Consulting at Cognizant, Peter Borden, Chief Digital Officer for Healthcare at Cognizant, and Pari Sanghavi, Senior Director, Life Sciences Supply Chain & Manufacturing at Cognizant. Read more about Trish, Peter and Pari.