Hospitals can gain time and money with single-vendor distribution

by | Jun 5, 2012

From: Healthcare Finance News

ALEXANDRIA, VA โ€“ According to a study released Tuesday by the Health Industry Distributors Association (HIDA), hospitals see substantial cost savings and greater employee and time efficiencies by maximizing their spend through a distributor, particularly in the areas of product ordering and receiving.

The Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC)-conducted study, called the “Hospital Procurement Study: Quantifying Supply Chain Costs for Distributor and Direct Orders,โ€ looked at hospital purchasing practices for distributor and manufacturer-direct orders at 32 hospitals of varying sizes and locations across the country over the last 12 months, according to Matt Rowan, HIDA president and CEO.

โ€œThe study quantifies the efficiencies associated with the distribution channel,โ€ said Rowan. โ€œItโ€™s a good business decision; time and money are saved by streamlining and having one single vendor handle as much as possible. Itโ€™s about employee productivity. Providers are able to spend little time working on distribution and more time with patients.โ€

According to Rowan, the study focused on hospitals that used a prime vendor distributor, and compared the time and related costs associated with distributor orders to those for manufacturer-direct orders.

Some of the major findings in the study include:

Distributor orders are three times as likely to be electronic and average less than 30 seconds per purchase line order. Manufacturer-based orders average more than three minutes per line due to manual ordering and sign-off.

Distributor-dominant practices such as advance ship notice reduce staff time spent reconciling receiving invoices and orders.

Hospitals spent an estimated $67 per day receiving distributor orders versus $131 on manufacturer-direct orders.

The study notes that while some high-dollar products do not fit within common โ€œcost-plusโ€ distribution models, hospitals benefited from increasing the share of commodity products purchased through a single distributor, and from examining new models that can move expensive preference items through distribution as well.

โ€œUsing a prime vendor distributor is the clear winner as far as cost and productivity go,โ€ said Rowan. โ€œThe study just reinforced the idea that hospitals need to be streamlining their resources. Itโ€™s cost-effective and requires little or no capital investment.โ€

For the full study and a list of recommendations hospitals can take to operate more efficiently, visit www.HIDA.org.

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