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Journal Article

Citation

Brandeau ML, Hutton DW, Owens DK, Bravata DM. Am. J. Disaster Med. 2007; 2(5): 231-247.

Affiliation

Department of Management Science and Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford California, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, American Society of Disaster Medicine, Publisher Weston Medical Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

18491839

Abstract

Responses to bioterrorism require rapid procurement and distribution of medical and pharmaceutical supplies, trained personnel, and information. Thus, they present significant logistical challenges. On the basis of a review of the manufacturing and service supply chain literature, the authors identified five supply chain strategies that can potentially increase the speed of response to a bioterrorism attack, reduce inventories, and save money: effective supply chain network design; effective inventory management; postponement of product customization and modularization of component parts; coordination of supply chain stakeholders and appropriate use of incentives; and effective information management. The authors describe how concepts learned from published evaluations of manufacturing and service supply chains, as well as lessons learned from responses to natural disasters, naturally occurring outbreaks, and the 2001 US anthrax attacks, can be applied to design, evaluate, and improve the bioterrorism response supply chain. Such lessons could also be applied to the response supply chains for disease outbreaks and natural and manmade disasters.


Language: en

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