What the pandemic has taught us about the healthcare supply chain
No sector has been affected quite so much by fissures in the supply chain as healthcare. Reports in September 2021 of dozens of cargo ships anchored off the coast of California, unable to deliver their goods to the Port of Los Angeles and Port of Long Beach, again underscored the fragility of supply chains. Indeed it has been an issue throughout the pandemic, but it took a turn for the worse when COVID-19 variants emerged and workers were found to be in short supply at these ports, at least in part out of fear of infection. So the ships continued to bob in the Pacific Ocean, and industries continued to be without vital supplies. No sector has been affected quite so much by fissures in the supply chain as healthcare. And as Cindy Juhas, chief strategy officer for the medical-equipment distributor CME, told the website KSL.com, the problem goes far deeper than delivery.
Make faster decisions with community advice
- AI Gets Better At Writing Patient Histories When Physicians Engineer The Prompts
- New Study Evaluates Virtual Reality to Reduce Scanxiety in Brain Tumor Patients
- Revolutionizing Healthcare: Harnessing the Power of IoT Solutions for Improved Patient Outcomes
- Carrum Health Raises $45 Million Series B to Expand Cancer Care Offerings and Launch New Service Lines
- Ethical Guardrails Are Essential To Making Generative AI Work For Healthcare
Deploy this technology today
-
nQ Cortex
Matched with Medical Subject Headings (MeSH): Biomedical Technology, Healthcare IT News: Artificial Intelligence
- NLabviva Platform
- Labviva Platform
- AI Dermatologist Platform
- Armis Platform for Healthcare