Healthcare Hygiene magazine April 2020 | Page 30

“I would say that the design of the new U.S. med- ical supply chain is exceedingly fragile,” Bernardes says. “In these early stages, we can already experience a shortage of personal protective equipment across the country, such as N95 respirators. As the cases spread, so will the scarcity. This shift in operation tempo will result in further disruptions in the chain of medical supplies. Now, most of these items are currently produced abroad, and those manufacturers are experiencing both a surge of demand globally and local disruptions as their sites become affected by the pandemic.” He continues, “Another crucial aspect is that the medical supply chain has become leaner over the years, so there is less of a buffer to cushion the ramp-up of other emergency measures. For instance, many large pharmacy retail chains and hospital chains have not stocked medical products in their warehouses because the costs are just too high. Instead, they have agreements with their distributors to hold an agreed-upon number of hours replenishment of inventory. As the stock of these retailers and hospitals now depend entirely on that of their distributors, shortages at the distributor can impact retailers immediately. The government’s strategic reserve of healthcare supplies can function as a transition buffer while manufactures ramp up production. However, the level of those stocks is not high, and those states that have requested it have already experienced rationing. The new pandemic has highlighted crucial vulnerabilities in the medical supply chain, which current design is based on global sourcing from a limited set of regions to cope with thin margins.” The PPE Shortage At the time of writing in late March, the PPE shortage was becoming more critical, as healthcare providers and first-responders were resorting to crafting their own masks to buy time until supplies form the Strategic National Stockpile and other sources reached them. In recent weeks, public- and private-sector efforts saw the production of millions more articles of PPE and critical medical devices such as ventilators, and the ramp-up of manufacturing of hand sanitizer by distilleries. On March 27, President Donald Trump signed a $2.2 trillion stimulus and coronavirus relief package that includes billions in aid for hospitals and medical facilities, but healthcare workers won’t feel its impact for weeks, according to a University of Notre Dame business professor. “While stimulus dollars may be able to help speed how quickly companies can increase their production capacity for personal protective equipment and other medical supplies, it could take some time for hospitals and doctors’ offices to have a stable amount of supplies to comprehensively treat patients who are infected with the coronavirus,” says Kaitlin Wowak, assistant professor of IT, analytics and operations at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College 30 Q & A The Best and Worst- Case Scenarios for the Healthcare Supply Chain Healthcare Hygiene magazine spoke with Li Ern Chen, MD, a physician advisor on the board of the Association for Healthcare Resource & Materials Management (AHRMM), as well as Mike Schiller, senior director of supply chain for AHRMM, about what’s ahead. Li Ern Chen, MD Mike Schiller HHM What is the best- and worst-case scenario when PPE runs short in healthcare facilities? Li Ern Chen (LEC): Healthcare personnel are creative! There are already groups coming together to create novel PPE and figuring out ways to extend the life of the PPE that they do have. They are also looking to other industries for ideas. I am optimistic that engineers and health care providers can solve this problem creatively and quickly. Mike Schiller (MS): We strongly recommend healthcare orga- nizations visit the CDC COVID-19 website, there you’ll find strategies on how to optimize the supply of PPE. AHRMM has developed and offers a comprehensive COVID-19 resource page that is available to members and non-members. HHM Is it a manufacturing shortfall or a distribution shortfall at this point in the COVID-19 outbreak scenario? LEC: Currently, manufacturing cannot keep up with consumption; there are hospitals using up stockpiled six-month supplies in a single week. With the COVID-19 pandemic shutting down manufacturing around the world, the supply is just not meeting the demand. When factories do come back online, they will likely be ramping up production above prior levels. At that point, we will likely then run into the problem where distribution channels become rate limiting. HHM What do you anticipate will happen to the healthcare supply chain if the curve does not flatten, versus if it does? LEC: The exponential rise in the number of cases is already causing an enormous strain. We will recover from the current crisis mode in which we are functioning. Flattening the curve will allow us to get our feet back under us more quickly. Regardless, the stress that the healthcare system is under is forcing the supply chain to be more creative, more resourceful and more efficient, which I hope will carry into the future. MS: There are number of active initiatives that span the federal, private industry, and community levels. Last week President Trump invoked the Defense Production Act. There is discussion of retooling non-healthcare manufacturing facilities to produce PPE supplies and encouraging examples of community engagement as highlighted with the Million Mask Project, and distillers making hand sanitizer. HHM How would you describe the current state of readiness in healthcare facilities relating to their inventory of PPE and other resources needed by frontline healthcare workers? LEC: Based on history and experience, many health care facilities and health systems had stockpiles of PPE ready for emergency scenarios Continued on page 31 april 2020 • www.healthcarehygienemagazine.com