Title: National supply chain
1National supply chain logistics solutions for
vaccines Thoughts from Optimize
2Current Supply Chain
Airport
National
Primary Store (National Level)
Sub-national 1
Sub-national 2
Sub-national 3
3Current Challenges
Review of Vaccine Management Assessment tools
(VMA) 18 National stores 152 Sub-national
stores 223 Health centers Enduring problems
Warehousing Distribution Temperature Stock
control Wastage Problems amplify and ripple
down the chain
Source Andrew Garnett (Optimize consultant)
4Current Challenges
- Push system requires
- Good forecasts based on accurate data and
information - Vaccines to be stored at many levels of the
system - Infrastructure and buffer stocks at each level to
anticipate demand fluctuations - The problem
- Often at some point in the chain, poor data
compromises good forecasts - Each store and transport link is a risk point and
bottleneck - Collection system at lower levels is weak
- Consequence
- Vaccines often don't end up where they are
suppose to in the right quantities, at the right
time and in the right conditions - Children may not get immunized (stock outs,
delays in delivery...) or immunized with damaged
vaccines (temperature exposures, too many storage
points and mishandling...) - Wasted financial resources (overstocking at lower
levels high vaccine expiry...)
5Future Challenges ?
- More expensive new vaccines
- And more to come
- Bulkier presentations
- More complexity in vaccine management
6At the Crossroads
- Has the simplicity of a logistic system developed
in the 80's reached it's limits today? - How to address some of the enduring problems of
the vaccine supply chain? - How to anticipate the future challenges and
complexities? - How to promote long term solutions to address
these? - And how to think beyond immunization for
solutions? - Optimize undertook a review of the experience in
the health sector and outside of health
7Future Supply Chain?
Airport
National
Primary Store (National Level)
Sub-national 1
Where is the boundary?
Sub-national 2
Sub-national 3
8Ideal Attributes
- Demand-driven from national and service delivery
levels - Distribution-based rather than collection at
sub-national level - Optimal number of steps increased speed
- Ability to move great volumes
- Minimized risks to the vaccines
- Traceable
- Integrated with the supply of other health
commodities - Good management
- Sustainable
- Increased access to target populations
9Possible Solutions
- Optimizing the current system
- Invest in more equipment
- Increase transport frequency
- Integrated with other health commodities
- Explore system alternatives
- Inter-country warehousing of vaccines
- More direct distribution down the supply chain
- Moving warehouses
- Outsourcing supply chain and logistics functions
- No one size fits all !
- Menu of options
- Solutions likely to be a mix
10Main Outcomes to be Expected
- Vaccines ending up where they are suppose to in
the right quantities, at the right time, and in
the right conditions - Higher coverage from reduced stock outs, delays
in delivery, and increased supervision - Lower burden of disease from children immunized
with potent vaccines - Mitigate some of the cold chain capacity issues
- Lower costs from reduced overstocking, vaccine
expiry, too many steps in the chain that increase
costs
11Inter-Country Warehousing
- Consolidate larger inventories of vaccines and
supplies in a single warehouse closer to a
catchment area of many countries - Advantages
- Accommodate for the procurement needs of several
countries - Use of larger cold chain shipping units to reduce
bulk and costs - Reduce the need to expand national cold chain
capacity - Limits the need to store as much buffer stocks at
all levels - Allows for secondary packing and bundling
- Shorter transits to countries
- Pay as you go system
12Inter-Country Warehousing
- Ex 1 USAID / SCMS Project
- For HIV-AIDS related commodities
- 3 regional warehouses (RSA, GHA, KEN)
- Managed by private sector "Fuel Logistics"
- Shorter delivery time (4 months to 6 weeks)
- Economies of scale (cost savings)
- More flexible to high variance of demand
- Ex 2 Regional Vaccine Cold Store facility in
Fiji - Vaccines are then be repackaged and distributed
to 12 Pacific Island States
13Streamlining Solutions
Regional Warehousing
Or
- More direct distribution
- Directly from the national (primary) store to
district stores - Directly from port of entry to intermediate
stores or lower (thru cross-docking) - The idea is to by-pass bottleneck levels of the
chain - Distribution system at sub-national
- Potential for delivery trips to be combined with
maintenance, supervision and data collection - Compatible with new information and refrigeration
technologies
Virtual Primary Store
Health Centres
Health Centres
Service Delivery
14Compatible Technologies
- Cooling technologies
- Passive cooling containers (rolling dollies)
- Solar PV battery-free refrigerators
- Hybrid battery free cooler
- Information technologies
- RFID, bar coding
- Mobile phones
- PDA's
15Ex Thailand's Current System
- Problems
- Poor information systems and forecasting
- Inadequate quantities being supplied
- Frequent delays in deliveries
- High wastage due to expiry
- MoH refrigerated trucks too old and expensive to
maintain - Health workers not skilled enough to manage the
cold chain
Today
Port of Entry
Primary Store (MoH)
Hospitals
16Ex Thailand's Solution - 2009
Today
The Future
- Why?
- Private logistics company already doing this for
HIV-AIDS drugs - Hospitals manage drugs and have computerized
system direct to national level and - They operate a distribution rather than
collection system that works
Port of Entry
Port of Entry
Primary Store (Parastatal)
Primary Store (MoH)
Outsourced storage and distribution to private 3
PL
Hospitals
17Outsourcing
- System solutions rely on outsourcing services
- The MoH of many countries already outsource
discreet supply chain and logistics functions - Rationale
- Managerial efficiency gains from MoH management
of logistics - Reduction in capital investments at the expense
of increased recurrent costs of outsourcing
services - Wastage is reduced because resources are used
more efficiently - Or cost increases are offset by improvement in
efficiency and quality - Two categories
- Contractor manages part of the system as a
service to the MoH - Contractor leases materials or equipment to the
MoH
18Outsourcing Options
19Outsourcing Models
20Menu of Solutions for the Future
21Thank You
- Patrick Lydon
- lydonp_at_who.int