Skip to: Curated Story Group 1
healthcarebusinessreview

Advertise

with us

    • US
    • EUROPE
    • APAC
    • CANADA
  • Home
  • Sections
    Business Process Outsourcing
    Compliance & Risk Management
    Consulting Service
    Dental Billing Services
    Facility Management Services
    Financial Services
    Health Insurance
    Healthcare Digital Marketing
    Healthcare Education
    Healthcare Engagement
    Healthcare Procurement
    Healthcare Security
    Healthcare Staffing
    Long-Term Care Pharmacy Services
    Medical Billing
    Medical Case Management
    Medical Transportation
    Multi Speciality
    Patient Monitoring
    Pharmacy Service
    Practice Management Service
    Real Estate Services
    Supply Chain
    Telemedicine Services
    Therapy Services
  • Contributors
  • News
  • Vendors
  • Conferences
  • CXO Awards
Welcome back to this new edition of Healthcare Business Review !!!✖
Sign In

Subscribe to our Weekly Newsletter to get latest updates to your inbox
8 MAY 2024It is always the end game ­ the aspiration to evolve a true end to end supply chain. Without it, we will continue to fall short of delivering a more responsive efficient supply chain in our healthcare industry. Other industries outside of healthcare are certainly more mature and we look at them with envy. A high level of illumination that displays the flow of product off customer shelves coupled with routine forecasts create a responsive, transparent environment to manage inventory at a higher level. The inability to view the big picture or the end to end supply chain results in incorrect trade-offs, or under optimized decisions negatively impacting revenue, profitability or cost. So, what prevents our healthcare industry in moving toward this desired environment?For one, other industries have universal data standards that clearly identify products across the globe. In healthcare, unless we adopt the Global Trade Identification Numbers (GTIN) (and other needed data standards) among providers and suppliers in a committed useable fashion, we run the risk of data discrepancies crippling our ability to communicate clearly the existing order and fulfillment gaps or imbalances. There have been numerous attempts to address this GTIN adoption and while these continue, they are episodic and not industry wide. We will need to address data standards commitments at some point in our industry, especially as our fee for service revenue is replaced more widely to risk-based payment models (full-risk bundles for episodic care and capitation for population health). This shift will indeed move us toward a consumer driven demand-based service/product ordering healthcare environment. Our climate today is still characterized by a fee for service payment system. This environment has fed a supply-demand set of dynamics ­ that is, encouraging more supply of health care services including more supplies to be considered for use. And so, another key element of our end to end supply chain will be the capability to perform demand based management analytics that will feed forecasts required by our suppliers to fulfill products as required by the "schedules" of clinical work to be performed. Healthcare systems that develop these capabilities will be able to create multiple supply response scenarios so that a robust reaction is generated that best meets the demand-supply gap objective. Another necessity is the alignment of common, integrated supply chain technology platforms among healthcare systems, distributors or owned central warehouses. Warehouse systems, inventory management, enterprise resource systems (ERPs), electronic medical records, asset tracking, and ordering systems may be just a few of the disparate technologies that will require coordination. The ability to create an immediate demand signal to suppliers will require capital commitment and coordinated technology planning to produce a signal that supplies need to be fulfilled. End to End Supply Chain: An Updated ViewBy Tom Lubotsky, Vice President Supply Chain, Allina HealthDEVELOPMENT OF LEADING AND LAGGING KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPIS) WILL PROVIDE THE INSIGHT NECESSARY TO RESPOND TO TRENDING OR IMMEDIATE SUPPLY CONTROL ISSUESIN MY OPINIONTom Lubotsky
< Page 7 | Page 9 >