One key factor for achieving positive health outcomes is medication adherence. Compliance with treatment plans is especially important for patients managing chronic conditions or recovering from acute episodes of care.
If providers lack necessary medications during drug shortages, how can hospitals ensure their patients receive the highest level of care?
The fact is that patients still need their treatments when facilities face supply issues. It’s up to hospital pharmacies to come up with viable solutions to navigate medication shortage challenges to continue to provide the best quality care possible to patients.
Building more resilience in a complex drug supply chain landscape starts with understanding and managing the distinct challenges it presents — and knowing the best strategies to mitigate the ramifications of medication scarcity.
In 2023, the U.S. witnessed its highest number of ongoing and active drug shortages in 10 years. In response to the lingering and growing challenge of drug shortages, hospitals everywhere have needed to revise their operations. With multiple factors contributing to this problem — including market shifts, manufacturing changes, natural disasters, and transportation disruptions — health systems must refine their inventory and supply systems.
As the healthcare industry experiences dwindling medication supplies, we are also seeing a global increase in demand as global populations age. While the pandemic was the principal issue leading to this spike over the past several years, as COVID fades further into the distance it’s becoming clear this challenge persists.
Although the pandemic on its own was a significant burden on hospital pharmacies already dealing with medication supply issues, it was far from the only major disruptor in recent years. The pharmaceutical industry has faced geopolitical conflicts, agitated trade relations, and even natural disasters — such as Hurricane Maria, which caused a monumental saline shortage when it hit Puerto Rico, and the more recent tornado that hit a Pfizer factory in North Carolina.
You can only track and plan for shortages you know about. Unfortunately for hospitals, this is easier said than done. When it comes to visibility, much of the problem lies in the absence of clear and timely reporting on medication shortages. Providers should work to make up for this lack of current and timely data by implementing their own in-house monitoring systems to supplement or replace spreadsheets and manual processes.
Pharmacy supply chain risk will always be a challenge for hospitals. By working with stakeholders to establish effective mitigation strategies, proactively allocating resources to the right areas, maintaining diverse supplier networks, using real-time data, and adopting technology to track fluctuations, providers can build a solid foundation for preempting or responding efficiently and effectively to operational disruptions.
At QuicksortRx, we give hospitals across the nation advanced analytics and accessible tools for executing effective strategies to get ahead of and better navigate drug shortages. Ready to see how our platform can help transform how your health system manages and responds to shortages? Contact us today for a demo.