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Design of a CPFR, Location, Inventory and Routing Approach to Diabetes and High Blood Pressure Medicine Supply Network Planning
Author(s) -
Francisco Andrés Chuchoque-Urbina,
Martha Patricia Caro-Gutiérrez,
Carlos Eduardor Montoya-Casas
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
ingenieria y universidad/ingenieria y universidad
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 0123-2126
pISSN - 2011-2769
DOI - 10.11144/javeriana.iued25.dcli
Subject(s) - supply chain , business , operations management , distribution (mathematics) , marketing , economics , mathematical analysis , mathematics
Objective: Designing a CPFR (collaborative planning forecasting and replenishment) model for the delivery of diabetes and arterial hypertension medicines from a health insurance company (EPS) to a healthcare provider (IPS) and comparing the performance of this collaborative chain to that of the traditional one through their corresponding supply chain costs. Methodology: A series of collaboration agreements involved in joint planning were established according to the designed CPFR model. This allowed (i) raising the levels of interaction between the health insurance company, the healthcare provider, the supplying pharmaceutical laboratories, and the patients; (ii) determining demand forecasts; (iii) locating distribution centers; and (iv) defining medicine distribution strategies oriented to the minimization of costs along the chain. Subsequently, the main differences between the current operation and CPFR models at the level of structure and decisions were characterized and then evaluated in terms of supply chain costs. Results: The significant impact of the proposed model is demonstrated. The total monthly cost of operating the chain is reduced by 11.2 % on average. Within the proposed innovation, an outstanding place is held by the savings reached in the purchase and distribution of medicines from the laboratory to the distribution centers, and by the customer satisfaction differences, which increased 15.3 % on average during the studied six-month period.

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