Title: Defense Medical Materiel Standardization Program DMMSP Initiative
1- Defense Medical Materiel Standardization Program
(DMMSP) Initiative
2Overview
- Genesis
- Logistics Key Performance Indicators
- High-level Logistics Attributes
- Current Status
- Way Forward
3DMMSP Origins
- First Principle Clinically Driven Medical
Supply Chain (CDMSC) - DASD(FHPR) requests Medical Logistics Proponent
Committee (MLPC) provide a decision brief on
how to create/move forward with the development
of a Defense Medical Materiel Standardization
Program (DMMSP) - January 2007 DMMSP Working Group Kickoff
4DMMSP Origins, cont.
- February 2007 Medical Logistics Summit produces
key attributes of DMMSP - March - Dec 2007 Progress on several logistics
aspects of DMMSP processes and databut need for
greater clinical participation in DMMSP
governance becomes increasingly urgent
5DASD(FHPR) Informal Guidance for DMMSP
- The MHS will implement a program of medical
materiel standardization built on commercial
supportability clinician-driven product
requirements and seamless integration of
Medicoeconomic assessments, regional and national
TRICARE standardization, and Joint or
Service-level, doctrine, combat development,
readiness plans and programs. This
standardization program has five key attributes
that directly relate to Force Health Protection
(FHP)
6Key Attributes of DMMSP
- Clinicians will practice in operational settings
as they train and practice in institutional
settings. This is a reversal of earlier "do in
peace as we do in war" or "austere but adequate"
principles and acknowledges that clinicians will
be supported by the logistics system that enables
them, rather than the reverse. - MTFs and operational medical practices
constitute two halves of an inseparably
integrated whole. Providers train and practice in
one setting and deploy to another. Training,
credentialing and clinical practice management in
MTFs must be logistically supported in
operational settings. If these practices are
unsupportable, patients should be evacuated to
locations that do support them.
7Key Attributes of DMMSP, cont.
- 3. Standardization and requirements forecasting
processes will be built on current institutional
clinical practice patterns. Deployable materiel
packages can be developed by Service and Joint
combat developers that incorporate current
clinical practices. If this is not possible,
patients will be evacuated as rapidly as possible
to definitive care sites where current clinical
practices are enabled.
8Key Attributes of DMMSP, cont.
- 4. DoD has one program for clinical
standardization. It incorporates pharmacoeconomic
assessments, tri-service regional business
operations and operational standardization. All
DoD organizations involved in medical materiel
standardization will create and implement
business processes that support the seamless
integration of these standardization processes. - 5. All DoD standardization processes are
governed by the overarching premise that medical
materiel requirements must be supportable by the
commercial supply chains that also support
institutional operations of the MHS.
Environmental, operational and mission-specific
requirements are important, but must be
supportable by DoD's commercial partners. Supply
chain enablers provided by the DoD Executive
Agent for Medical Materiel must also support this
premise.
9DMMSP Attributes vs. Potential KPIs
10DMMSP Attributes vs. Potential KPIs, cont.
11The Challenge Deploy Institutional Clinical
Practices
From Unmeasured Perception
To Measurable Reality
Operational Products
Operational Products
Institutional Products
Institutional Products
- Obstacles include
- Fragmented data assets with multiple product
identification methods and variable data quality - Limited number of SMEs to cope with high volume
of items - Rapid evolution of technologies changing
operational concepts - IT systems that do not make data-sharing
process integration easy - Consensus on DMMSP Governance is difficult
12High-Level Attributes (Logistics View)
- Linkage Use governance, processes and shared
data to create linked relationships
- Unified Single governance authority (to guide,
focus, prevent duplication and overlap) - Action categories Tailor processes to focus
standardization resources based on expected
benefits (clinical outcomes, operational
effectiveness, economic savings) - Data-centric Strengthen management of supporting
data resources to provide authoritative data for
decision-making
SCD- Service Combat Developer/SMD- Service
Materiel Developer
13Potential Benefits
- Patient Safety / Clinical Efficacy
- Outcome-based product selection when possible
- Continuity from forward edge to definitive care
- Better support for preferred and specialty
products - Readiness
- Deployable assemblages outfitted with common,
up-to-date items improved interoperability - Easier transition from institutional to
operational practice - Reduced variation and inefficiency in theater
supply chain - Economic
- Regional and National Discounts for volume
commitments - More efficient interface with Regional Prime
Vendors
14Potential Benefits, cont.
- Civilian sector supply chain improvement
initiatives generated an average 1.25 annual
cost reduction - Healthcare organizations implementing best
practice processes can save between 15 and 30
percent - Greatest opportunity for savings can be achieved
through standardization - Focus on clean, comprehensive supply item masters
to improve ability to evaluate product data - Increase awareness and understanding of metrics
- To reduce supply costs, physicians must be
involved stakeholders in standardization and
utilization efforts - Information from HFMAs 2005 Supply Chain
Benchmarking Survey
15Work to Date
- Clinically-Driven Medical Supply Chain Report
(CDMSC) - Good stove-piped processes
- Lack of cross-walk on standardization activities
- Need for data sharing tools
- Documentation of as-is standardization-related
processes in - DMSB (Defense Medical Standardization Board)
- PEC (Pharmaco-Economic Committee)
- TRBOs (Tri-Service Regional Business Offices)
- Services (partial)
16Work to Date, cont.
- Identification of critical data elements for
product identification - Survey of existing logistics data tools (PDB,
JMAR, UDR) - Review of statutory and DoD references on
standardization and cataloging - Development of proposed logistics-based KPIs to
measure standardization performance
- PDB-Planning Data Rates, JMAR-Joint Medical
Asset Repository, UDR-Universal Data Repository
17Next Steps
- To-Be Process Backbone linking standardization
activities and data required to support
coordination - Business rules and criteria for standardization
and allocating resources according to expected
benefit - Identification and evaluation of data
requirements to support cataloging and
standardization
18Next Steps, cont.
- Development of surveillance and performance
monitoring solutions - Development of proposed DoD policies and
Governance structures for medical standardization - Concept under consideration for a governing body
comprised of tri-service, multi-agency clinical
representatives - GO/SES buy-in Force Health Protection Council
19Timeline
- NLT Oct 2007 Review Validate As-Is
- Oct Dec 2007 Develop Validate To-Be
- January 2008 Initial Recommendations
- Jan - April 2008
- Draft Documents (DoDD, DoDI) OPR is FHPR AO is
DMMSP WG - Develop Action Plan for Implementation OPR is
FHPR AO is DMMSP WG
20Timeline, Cont.
- Jan - April 2008, cont
- Drafts worked by AO through team process
- Joint Integrated Process Team (JIPT)
- Expeditionary Sustainment Command (ESC)
- MLPC
- October 2008
- DoDD, DoDI Complete
- Program Initial Operating Capability (IOC)
21Questions?
22BACKUP
23Vision
- A single governing body should be established to
coordinate and integrate MHS medical materiel
standardization efforts - Will be comprised of O-6 level representatives
from SCDs, TRBOs, PEC, DMSB, DSCP, Joint Staff,
HA CPP and the MLPC - Will be accountable to the FHPC for DMMSP and may
supplant the DMSB Flag Board - Will guide development and adoption of
standardized business practices for medical
materiel standardization for both institutional
and operational settings within the MHS - Will provide direction to the DMSB/DML PO staff
in carrying out DMMSP functions - Will facilitate information exchange to eliminate
duplicative clinical evaluation panels - Will establish and monitor MHS standardization
metrics with accountability to the FHPC to
achieve agreed upon goals - Will act as the authoritative clinical voice in
review and coordination of all DML issues
referred from the MLPC - Will define clinical requirements for development
of the CUD, JMAT and other modeling tools - Will act as the FLA under DLA EA for clinical
issues pertaining to the Class VIII supply chain - Will explore opportunities for interagency
standardization with the VA - Will act as the DoD Commodity Council for
National DoD medical materiel acquisition
initiatives and as such will be designated as the
DoD Joint Standardization Board (JSB) - Will explore implementation of TARA evaluations
to standardize medical equipment used throughout
the MHS
24Governance Alternatives
- Working Group Determining Alternatives for
Over-arching Governance - Link all Standardization efforts into one program
- Fit into existing MHS structure
- Options
- Force Health Protection Council
- Clinical Steering Council
- Re-Organize Defense medical Standardization Board
Structure - Leave Existing Structure with added
responsibility - All share common theme of Clinical Advisory
Committee
25Clinical Advisory Committee (CAC)
- Suggested Core Composition
- Pharmaco-Economic Committee
- Defense Medical Standardization Board
- Service Clinical Ops (x4)
- Medical Logistics Proponent Committee
- Deputy Chief Medical Officer, TMA
- JSS/JFCOM
- VA Clinical Ops if needed
- Others TBD by CAC