Title: Dr Liz Breen
1- Dr Liz Breen
- Lecturer in Operations Management
- University of Bradford, School of Management
2Agenda
-
- What are the risks in the supply chain?
- How can risk be assessed?
3Reminder.
- Nature of the overarching research project, which
this study is part of. - To investigate the prevalence and nature of risks
in the pharmaceutical supply chain in the NHS. - The research bid, for approximately 250, 000,
was reviewed and received a 50 vote so is due to
be resubmitted end of 2006.
4What are the risks in the supply chain?
5Risk what is it?
- Supply risk is defined as the potential
occurrence of an incident or failure to seize
opportunities with inbound supply, the outcome of
which results in a financial loss for the firm
(Zsidisin et al, 2006). - The essence of risk management lies in
maximising the areas where we have some control
over the outcome while minimising the areas where
we have absolutely no control over the outcome
and the linkage between effect and cause is
hidden from us. - Peter Bernstein - Against the Gods (Buck and
Riches 1999)
6Risk Management
- Sources of risk in the PSC affecting hospital
pharmacy? - Product discontinuity, poor performance, patient
safety/dispensing errors, technological errors
(causing stock shortages in pharmacies), internet
pharmacies and counterfeit drugs. - By understanding risk, we can take steps to
remove unnecessary risk e.g. product
discontinuity poor performance patient
safety/dispensing errors, - .and ensure the equal distribution of necessary
risk e.g. new markets entrants e-business.
7Risk Management - statistics
- The Department of Health estimates that one in
ten patients admitted to NHS hospitals will be
unintentionally harmed. The most common incidents
reported in 2005 were patient injury (due to
falls), followed by medication errors, equipment
related incidents, record documentation error and
communication failure (National Audit Office,
November 2005). - A human influenza pandemic represents what risk
managers call a low frequency/high severity
event, same as hurricanes, tsunamis and
earthquakes. Agencies predict its global effects
could include more than 7 million deaths, 25-50
of the worlds workforce off work, 800 billion
in economic damage and major disruptions to every
industry and their supply lines (Drawas
200614).
8Risk Management - statistics
- Medication errors alone equate to 200-400
million per year in the UK, and to this must be
added the unknown cost of errors in primary care
and litigation (Matthew and Bain, 2006). - Considering the subject of counterfeit drugs
within the PSC, the Medicines and Healthcare
Products Regulatory Agency is currently
investigating 117 internet-related cases where
medicines legislation has been potentially
breached (BBC News, 2006).
9Chopra and Sodhi 2004. Pg 54
10Supply Risk Sources
- Financial instability or financial failure of a
supplier - ineffective management in the supplier firm
- problems in electronically sharing information
with suppliers - suppliers incorrectly interpreting our
requirements - natural disasters or acts of God affecting
suppliers operations - political instability/ war affecting suppliers
operations - long physical distances between buyer and
suppliers - inability to influence suppliers
- lack of alternative suppliers
- inability of supplier to meet increases in
required volumes (gt20) - new or unproven product/process technology being
used by suppliers - transportation disruptions with inbound supply
channels - variability in transportation times with inbound
supply channels - possibility of suppliers putting your firm on
allocation - incoming product quality problems
- labour/management problems at suppliers
- suppliers exiting market on short notice
- supply disruptions in the second tier
- currency rate fluctuations
(Zsidisin et al, 2006)
11Drivers in the Pharmaceutical industry are.
- Product time to market
- Regulations
- Divesting excess capacity
- Research efficiency
- Tailored localized pharmaceutical solutions
- Development of designer drugs
- Rapid response vaccines
- SC optimization
- Virtual enterprises
- An estimate of 200400m is required to launch a
new drug, and an average of 812 years elapses
from patent filing to first sale (see, e.g.
Grabowski, 1997).
Shah, 2003
12Risk Management Workshop November 2005
- Attended by twenty pharmaceutical stakeholders
including - NHS Purchasing and Supply Agency
- Pharmaceutical Manufacturers and Distributors
- Pharmaceutical Wholesalers
- Pharmaceutical Consultants
- Specialist Pharmacy Practitioners
- The Association of British Pharmaceutical
Industry - The British Association of European
Pharmaceutical Distributors - European Association of Euro-Pharmaceutical
Companies.
13Risk Management Workshop November 2005
- The workshop had the following outputs
- A map of the current pharmaceutical supply
network as agreed by all stakeholders in
attendance - Identification of examples of risk and where they
exist on the supply chain map - Prioritisation of risk as determined by
attendees.
14Current top issues in the PSC as identified by
the workshop.
- Poor performance
- Product unavailability
- Patient safety
- Buyer-supplier relationships
- Contract negotiation
- Vendor management
- Inventory management
- Wholesalers v short-line stores
- Unlicensed medications
- Parallel imports
- Counterfeit drugs.
15How can risk be assessed?
16Measuring risk - Criteria
- Can include Impact, Severity, Frequency,
Probability - Likelihood, Recipient, Control factor.
- May be purely qualitative analysis, e.g. identify
a risk, determine its severity/probability and
formulate a mitigation strategy. - May be based on mathematical modelling and
simulation e.g. Monte Carlo simulation.
17(No Transcript)
18Research conducted as part of award
- Questionnaire constructed based on risk
assessment and management literature - Incorporated 15 questions focusing on nature of
risk assessment and management, drivers, tools
used, method of analysis, rating criteria, and
corporate responsibility.
19Results
- The number of surveys circulated 212 (see next
slide for breakdown) - Follow-up e-mails to the pharmaceutical industry
12 - Response from these 5
- Limitations to methodology timing, database
source accuracy, access to most responsible
person, choice of data collection tool. - Sweetener coffee.
20Questionnaires circulated
21Usable responses by sector.Standard Industry
Classifications 1992.
22Results
- 3 of the 19 companies could not provide a
definition of risk as used within their company - The general response focused on the negative
impact of risk in safety terms and on business
performance. - Only 1 respondent seen risk as an opportunity and
not a negative entity e.g. hazard. - Risk was seen as been sub-divided into Corporate,
Tactical and Operational, with the distinct focus
on the business itself.
23Why perform risk assessments?
- General consensus
- To meet legislative requirements
- Because the supply chain is complex
- To identify and mitigate against risk
- To manage HS in workplace
- To proactively manage risks to reduce later
impact - One respondent focused solely on the business
to monitor the exposure of the company and its
stakeholders.
24What prompts a risk assessment?least important
(1) to most important (7).
- Identification of a hazard (affecting health and
safety) 6.5 - Identification of an interruption to the
operation 5.1 - Legal obligations 6.3
- Moral obligations 5.9
- Ethical obligations 5.8
- Health and safety consciousness with staff 5.7
- Health and safety consciousness with customers
5.4 - To reduce or eliminate risk to heath safety 6
- To reduce or eliminate risk to operational
performance 6 - Part of staff responsibilities 4.6
- Has to be done as dictated by parent group 3.5
- Compliance with maintenance of standards/accredita
tion 5.2 - Opportunity to reduce costs 4.4
25Risk assessment tool/framework/model used
- A recognised/pre-defined model
- NR (4), N (7), Y (8)
- An internally developed model
- NR (1), N (3), Y (15)
- A consultants model
- NR (6), N (10), Y (3)
- A model applied by the parent company
- NR (6), N (11), Y (2)
26Why this one?
- Meets company needs
- Trained in this one
- Simple yet effective
- Mandatory
- Better outputs
- Covers internal and external riskIt is simple
for non-risk experts (senior managers) to
understand at summary level, but provides
extensive detail behind it for the risk
professionals to use.
27Use of other tools (before current)
- 11 of the 19 respondents stated that they had not
used any other risk assessment tools previously. - 6 stated that they had e.g. FMEA
- The reason given for not using other tools was
that they had been superseded, were less
effective and more complex and that the outcome
was not always realistic.
28Qualitative v Quantitative
- Risk assessments can be conducted on either a
qualitative or quantitative basis. - 14 of the companies questioned stated that they
would use a combination of qualitative and
quantitative tools.
29What are the key criteria used to formulate a
risk rating?
- Probability of occurrence 95
- Impact on immediate customers and staff health
68 - Impact on operational capacity 58
- Impact on buyers and suppliers 37
- Controllability factor 47
- Financial Repercussions 42
- Feasibility of elimination 58
- Severity rating 89
- Other 21
30What are the output categories of the risk
assessment process?
- Low-medium-high risk bands 58
- 1-10 risk rankings 37
- Tolerable-intolerable risk 26
- Long-medium-short term risk 21
- No action immediate action 26
- Probabilities 26
- Other 26
31Responsibility and review
- The responsibility for RA resided generally with
more senior management, or with dedicated
personnel e.g. Quality Assurance Manager or the
HS Manager, Head of, Director of etc. - 1 respondent said that no-one was clearly
responsible so it fell to the MD by default
whilst another stated that it was their Board of
Directors. - A number of respondents felt that all employees
were responsible for managing risk.
32Responsibility and review
- The person responsible for managing risk was not
always the individual who conducted the risk
assessments (in 74 of the cases). - The review period for the risk assessment process
was generally annually. - 1 company stated that it was reviewed every
quarter and another every 6 months. - I respondent agreed that their process was
reviewed occasionally and another when a risk was
identified. - 5 companies felt that it was good working
practice to continuously review their risk
assessment practice.
33General Comments
- The survey response was disappointing so its
difficult to say if results are representative of
the pharmaceutical sector or industry. - The results would indicate that companies
acknowledge the importance of this issue and its
impact on both business performance and health
safety. - The simplest models appear to be most preferable
and those most commonly used are developed
in-house or by consultants. - Is risk assessment/management something that is
and has to be done but no-one gets that excited
about?
34Thanks.
- To Roger for presenting this for me in my absence
- To PDIG and Pfizer for sponsoring this study
- To the industry for the support they have shown
and hopefully will continue to show in the future.
35THANK YOU
- Contact l.breen_at_bradford.ac.uk