Healthcare supply chains involve many parts like suppliers, manufacturers, distributors, and healthcare providers. Recent studies show that many U.S. healthcare firms can only see their direct suppliers. Few can watch risks beyond those first suppliers. This makes it hard to fix problems quickly when things like product shortages or transport delays happen.
Problems during the COVID-19 pandemic showed weaknesses in healthcare supply chains all over the world. Many U.S. healthcare providers ran short of important items like protective gear, medicine, and medical devices. The pandemic showed that supply chains need better planning, flexibility, and clear communication.
Supply chain visibility means being able to track products, materials, and data at every step. This helps healthcare groups see real-time stock levels, how suppliers are performing, shipping status, and possible problems.
Studies say supply chain visibility helps with:
By 2026, about 70% of U.S. hospitals are expected to use cloud-based supply chain management. These systems make work smoother, cut costs, and improve security. Going digital also helps capture data automatically and keeps inventory accurate.
For example, Piedmont Healthcare cut price errors by 81% using automated price checks and contract matching. Children’s of Alabama sped up invoice work by automating 90% of invoices. These gains came from digital tools that improve supply chain transparency and automation.
Diversifying supply chains means not relying on just one supplier or one location. That lowers risks from disruptions, political problems, or natural events. Healthcare firms use several ways to diversify:
Reports show healthcare firms are slowly widening their supply areas and adding more suppliers. For example, 60% have regionalized parts of their supply chains, and 33% moved some production closer to customers during the pandemic. This was better than many other industries.
Still, diversification makes things more complex and a bit more expensive. It also means firms must keep quality steady among many suppliers. Planning carefully and using technology helps solve these problems.
Technology like cloud computing, Internet of Things (IoT), RFID, and artificial intelligence (AI) plays a big role in managing supply chains now. Healthcare firms use digital tools to watch supplies, track shipments, and study data.
About 46% of U.S. healthcare companies use AI for risk management in supply chains. AI helps plan better, improve logistics, and react faster when demand rises or suppliers fail.
Digital dashboards that show end-to-end supply chain status help find problems early. A study found 67% of companies with digital dashboards were twice as likely to avoid disruptions. But only about 10% of healthcare providers say they have enough digital experts to run advanced supply chain projects. This lack of skilled people slows adoption.
Companies like Simbo AI offer AI-based phone automation and answering systems. AI automation can also help healthcare supply chains. It reduces human mistakes, handles routine tasks, and sends real-time alerts.
Examples of AI workflow automation in healthcare supply chains include:
For medical practice administrators, owners, and IT managers in the U.S., these tips can help improve supply chains:
Organizations like Piedmont Healthcare and Children’s of Alabama show benefits from digital supply chain tools. Piedmont cut pricing errors by 81% after automating price checks and contracts. Children’s of Alabama sped up invoice work by automating 90% of invoices without manual input.
Northwestern Medicine digitized buying-to-payment workflows, cutting manual work and preparing the system for future growth. These examples show that better visibility and automation help save money and improve service.
Despite progress, U.S. healthcare supply chains still face problems:
Medical practice administrators and IT managers need to focus on these challenges to make supply chains stronger.
Healthcare firms that use these best practices, improve supply chain visibility, diversify suppliers, and add AI and automation will be better able to handle disruptions. They can cut costs and keep patient care steady. These steps help create steady supply networks in the U.S. healthcare system, improving results for providers and patients.
The report focuses on assessing the resilience of healthcare supply chains in the APEC region, highlighting integration and susceptibility to disruptions, especially in light of lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The report was prepared by Access Partnership, informed by consultations with leading healthcare firms like Johnson & Johnson and UPS, and included a survey of over 300 healthcare firms across 15 APEC markets.
The report reveals high integration in supply chains, indicates they are resilient yet show vulnerabilities, suggests pandemic lessons for future improvements, and proposes strategies for enhancing resilience in healthcare supply chains.
Five strategies include prioritizing trade and movement of essential personnel, creating APEC-level response guidelines, enhancing connectivity, promoting economy-wide taskforces for flexibility, and supporting capacity building for MSMEs.
Healthcare firms should measure current resilience, focus on flexibility and diversification, increase visibility, align with best practices, and engage in industry advocacy efforts.
The pandemic exposed significant coordination challenges and emphasized the need for businesses to invest in transparency, flexibility, and revised distribution models.
Policymakers can harmonize regulations, expedite cross-border flows, and enhance trade infrastructure to strengthen the resilience of healthcare supply chains.
Measuring resilience helps firms understand their current vulnerabilities, enabling them to implement strategies for improvement and better position themselves against future disruptions.
Improvements include increasing flexibility in product sourcing, diversifying suppliers and transportation options, and enhancing overall supply chain visibility.
The research is connected to several upcoming events, including segment reports and the APEC CEO Summit in November 2023, focusing on building resilience in supply chains.