Landscaping the structures of GAVI country vaccine supply chains and testing the effects of radical redesign

Bruce Y. Lee*, Diana L. Connor, Angela R. Wateska, Bryan A. Norman, Jayant Rajgopal, Brigid E. Cakouros, Sheng-I Chen, Erin G. Claypool, Leila A. Haidari, Veena Karir, Jim Leonard, Leslie E. Mueller, Proma Paul, Michelle M. Schmitz, Joel S. Welling, Yu Ting Weng, Shawn T. Brown

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

38 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Many of the world's vaccine supply chains do not adequately provide vaccines, prompting several questions: how are vaccine supply chains currently structured, are these structures closely tailored to individual countries, and should these supply chains be radically redesigned? Methods: We segmented the 57 GAVI-eligible countries' vaccine supply chains based on their structure/morphology, analyzed whether these segments correlated with differences in country characteristics, and then utilized HERMES to develop a detailed simulation model of three sample countries' supply chains and explore the cost and impact of various alternative structures. Results: The majority of supply chains (34 of 57) consist of four levels, despite serving a wide diversity of geographical areas and population sizes. These four-level supply chains loosely fall into three clusters [(1) 18 countries relatively more bottom-heavy, i.e., many more storage locations lower in the supply chain, (2) seven with relatively more storage locations in both top and lower levels, and (3) nine comparatively more top-heavy] which do not correlate closely with any of the country characteristics considered. For all three cluster types, our HERMES modeling found that simplified systems (a central location shipping directly to immunization locations with a limited number of Hubs in between) resulted in lower operating costs. Conclusion: A standard four-tier design template may have been followed for most countries and raises the possibility that simpler and more tailored designs may be warranted.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4451-4458
Number of pages8
JournalVaccine
Volume33
Issue number36
DOIs
StatePublished - 26 Aug 2015

Keywords

  • Immunization
  • Modeling
  • Supply chains

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Landscaping the structures of GAVI country vaccine supply chains and testing the effects of radical redesign'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this