With the health of humankind the ultimate goal, speeding treatments and test samples reliably from one place to the next has always mattered in healthcare.
Now, with 100,000-plus new COVID-19 cases diagnosed each day in the United States alone... and with the flu and other seasonal illnesses a looming worry... supply chains are literally a matter of life and death. Like patients, supply chains must be kept healthy and, as with patients, complications can develop.
It's easy to think of a healthcare supply chain as a smooth process that moves medicines from manufacturer to distribution center to clinic and patient. More accurately, though, a supply chain is a collection of moving parts, units that move products in stages.
Any event in any section that stops movement – any pinch point – can compromise healing treatments, and patient health and safety.
The pressing challenges of the 2020s require third-party logistics providers (3PLs) to organize and operate supply chains of the highest integrity. Quality systems must ensure the integrity of the storage and shipments at every point in transportation.
The sheer complexity of some healthcare logistics challenges can be daunting. Consider, for example, what will be required to universally deliver a COVID-19 vaccine.
Creating enough immunity worldwide to get humankind safely past the pandemic will require an estimated five billion doses of vaccine... and there's strong indication a vaccine may require a booster shot. This means 10 billion doses must be manufactured, distributed, and administered globally at speeds fast enough to keep the virus from developing resistance.
To add to the complexity, there's a strong chance that any COVID vaccine, likely a biologic, will need storage and shipment at temperatures as low as -80 degrees Centigrade. Supply chains will need sophisticated cold chain capabilities without compromise at any point.
The bottom line? Storing and delivering 10 billion doses of life-saving vaccine will require a 3PL partner with a truly extraordinary blend of experience, expertise, and infrastructure.
The handful of pharma companies leading the vaccine race don't have the infrastructure themselves to get 10 billion vaccine doses everywhere in the world – to megacities and mountainside villages, islands and desert communities.
Manufacturers will need to outsource at least parts of their supply chains for necessary speed and scope. This adds complexity to the supply chain, bringing more potential for pinch points.
What company, after the tremendous achievement of developing a vaccine, wishes to risk adulteration due to supply chain inefficiency or quality management issues?
Trust is an issue too. We're seeing heightened public worry over the integrity of a potential COVID vaccine.
Questions persist about speed of development, research/regulatory oversight, long-term risks, etc. People who lack confidence in vaccine research or in its transportation may choose not to be vaccinated... perpetuating the pandemic.
All elements – speed, equipment, reliability, cold chain monitoring, etc. – must operate flawlessly. Even a small failure could be amplified in the marketplace, driving deeper distrust and lack of confidence... and delaying effective global immunity.
That term – global – raises the 3PL bar even higher. Smoothly operating a worldwide supply chain is a challenge not every partner can meet.
Among a 3PL partner's most valued assets is its global knowledge. For vaccines (and other emerging biologics), the right distribution and transportation provider will know the exacting requirements for transport and storage, country by country. Examples include: What strict rules apply in this nation? What environmental standards must be met in that one? Where is specialty labeling required? What are storage regulations? A savvy 3PL partner knows these answers up front.
Certain countries have strict regulations on transportation of healthcare products. Others do not. A logistics provider unaware of standards (or one that turns a blind eye to them) can damage a shipment and the efficacy of the vaccines... and the hard-won reputation of the vaccine maker and logistics partner.
3PL provider can look you in the eye and tell you its supply chain is about patients, not just test kits and cold chains and vaccine integrity. That mindset is really where a quality system starts.
Many UPS professionals, for example, have migrated into the company from healthcare fields, bringing industry-leading perspectives into decisions and processes. That foundation – the right culture and the right people – drives the right actions.
To remain the best 3PL partner in the industry, UPS Healthcare has a preferred-carrier Good Distribution Practices (GDP) certification program that qualifies third-party providers and ensures our carrier choices meet business requirements and quality standards. We look at three areas.
Our process makes it certain that only preferred vendors handle your products, consistently conforming to GDP standards.
The ultimate component of any quality system is its people – a seasoned team of professionals imbedded in a 3PL's supply chain. There's no substitute for human care in healthcare. Our 3PL services are in the hands of healthcare professionals guided by a simple credo:
Quality First. Patient Driven.
We'd love to learn more about your business needs.
Contact us to learn how a customized logistics plan could help position you for success.