Resilience among family physicians during the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada
The purpose of this study was to investigate how the COVID-19 pandemic’s inaugural wave impacted the professional autonomy of family physicians in Canada. This study highlights how family physician’s resilience enabled them to overcome the many challenges they faced to provide health services to patients and has enabled them to rebuild their sense of purpose and duty of care.
The Necessity of Healthcare Supply Chain Resilience for Crisis Preparedness
There have been many opportunities to learn from past Canadian and global crises, which have emphasized the importance of healthcare supply chain resilience in providing essential care to patients; however, considerations of healthcare supply chain resilience remain a significant gap in preparedness planning. Illustrated through the Canadian response to COVID-19 pandemic, this article will explore how healthcare supply chain resilience should be a necessary consideration in any crisis preparedness plans.
Le Niveau de Maturité Digitale de la Chaîne Logistique Interne des Établissements de Santé de la Province de Québec : Une Étude Exploratoire
Le présent article vise donc à répondre à la question de recherche suivante : quel est le niveau de maturité digitale de la chaîne logistique interne des établissements de santé de la province de Québec ?
Gestion des Équipements de Protection Individuelle en Pandémie : Des Leçons du Secteur Canadien de la Santé
À cet effet, la présente étude entend répondre à cette question de recherche : quelles sont les initiatives qui pourraient être déployées à la lumière des leçons de la gestion des équipements de protection individuelle afin d’accroître la résilience de la chaîne logistique de la santé ?
The Emerging Features of Healthcare Supply Chain Resilience: Learning from a Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed significant fragilities in the configuration of global healthcare supply chains. This was felt acutely by citizens, patients and healthcare workers across Canada. As demand for critical medical products surged in Canada, and globally, provincial healthcare supply chain teams worked to rapidly stabilize their supply chains. These efforts indicate the emerging features of healthcare supply chain resilience.
Facing Disruption: Learning from The Healthcare Supply Chain Responses in British Columbia During The COVID-19 Pandemic
This article describes the key findings from a case study on PPE supply chain responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in British Columbia (BC). It highlights a set of constructive response mechanisms to potential crises along healthcare supply chain.
Digitally Enabled Supply Chain as A Strategic Asset for the COVID-19 Response in Alberta
This provincial case study, one of seven conducted as part of a national research program on healthcare supply chain management during COVID-19, focuses on Alberta. With a history of emergency preparedness, Alberta’s unique context, one that includes having an already established, centralized, and digital healthcare supply chain strategy, sets this case apart from the others in terms of pandemic responses.
Supply Chain Capacity to Respond to the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ontario: Challenges Faced by a Health System in Transition
This provincial case study, one of seven conducted as part of a national research program on healthcare supply chain management during COVID-19, focuses on Ontario. The context of significant restructuring of health organizations and regions in Ontario challenged the province’s capacity to respond to COVID-19.
Supply Chain Integration as A Strategy to Strengthen Pandemic Responsiveness in Nova Scotia
This provincial case study, one of seven conducted as part of a national research program on management during COVID-19, focuses on Nova Scotia. During the first wave of the pandemic, Nova Scotia faced the massive destabilization of its traditional supply channels and had to grapple with role clarity and communication in its emergency response structure.
Supply Chain Capacity to Respond COVID-19 in Newfoundland and Labrador: An Integrated Leadership Strategy
This provincial case study, one of seven conducted as part of a national research program on healthcare supply chain management during COVID-19, focuses on Newfoundland and Labrador (NL). Faced with the destabilization of its traditional supply chain, NL leveraged an existing centralized healthcare supply chain structure to organize its supply chain response to the pandemic.
Manitoba 2020: How Centralizing the Healthcare Supply Chain Helped with Pandemic Management
A case study design was used to understand Manitoba’s response to accessing Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) in the first wave of the global coronavirus pandemic. By evolving early on in the pandemic to a provincially led structure dedicated to the healthcare supply chain, Manitoba was able to avoid major shortages in access to PPE.
The Management of Personal Protective Equipment During the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Case of the Province of Quebec
Like other Canadian provinces, Quebec managed shortages of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) in the early weeks of the COVID-19 pandemic. Two years later, with hindsight, what lessons can we learn from this logistics crisis?
Advancing Supply Chain Resilience for Canadian Health Systems
Every government leader and health system leader knew, or should have known, that a pandemic was inevitable. Yet, when the COVID-19 pandemic arrived, the Canadian health care supply chain was not ready.
Learning Models for Forecasting Hospital Resource Utilization for COVID-19 Patients in Canada
This work aims to create predictive models that can use Canada COVID-19 data and pandemic-related factors to accurately forecast 5 quantities – three related to hospital resource utilization (i.e., number of hospital beds, ICU beds, and ventilators that will be needed by COVID-19 patients) and two to the pandemic progress (i.e., number of COVID-19 cases and COVID-19 deaths) – several weeks in advance.
COVID-19, Workforce Autonomy and the Health Supply Chain
This paper examines the relationship between health supply chain capacity and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Canada’s health workforce. The findings of this research also highlight the impact of the pandemic on health workers, specifically the relationship between the health supply chain and the autonomy of the health workforce.
Key Characteristics of a Fragile Healthcare Supply Chain: Learning from a Pandemic
In this paper, we present emerging findings from a national research study that documents the key features of the fragility of the health supply chain evident across the seven Canadian provinces. Results suggest that the fragility of the health supply chain contributes to substantive challenges across health systems, thus limiting or precluding proactive and comprehensive responses to pandemic management. These findings inform strategies to strengthen supply chain capacity and performance in order to enable health systems to effectively respond to pandemic events.
An Evidence-Based Strategy to Scale Vaccination in Canada
In this paper, we present emerging findings, from a national research study, that document the key challenges faced by current vaccine rollout strategies, which include procurement and leadership strategies, citizen engagement and limitations in supply chain capacity. These findings are used to inform a scalable vaccine strategy comprising collaborative leadership, mobilization of an integrated workforce and a digitally enabled supply chain strategy.
"Flying Blind”: Canada’s Supply Chain Infrastructure and the COVID-19 Pandemic
Emerging evidence from a national research study highlights the significance of supply chain data infrastructure and processes that offer transparent, real-time data to inform decisions that support a coordinated, evidence-informed pandemic strategy that is proactive and capable of protecting the health of every Canadian.
Case Study: Innovation Procurement in Health Systems: Exploring Practice and Lessons Learned
As rising healthcare costs continue to challenge the sustainability of global health systems, there has been a strategic shift toward a focus on value, which considers the outcomes and value of healthcare delivery relative to the costs of care delivery.