Inventory and order management for healthcare commodities during a pandemic
DOI10.1007/S10479-024-05870-4zbMATH Open1543.90004MaRDI QIDQ6573354FDOQ6573354
Authors: Chelsea Greene, Zelda B. Zabinsky, David Sarley, Laila Akhlaghi
Publication date: 16 July 2024
Published in: Annals of Operations Research (Search for Journal in Brave)
Recommendations
- PPE supply optimization under risks of disruption from the COVID-19 pandemic
- A model of <scp>supply‐chain</scp> decisions for resource sharing with an application to ventilator allocation to combat <scp>COVID</scp>‐19
- A robust multi-objective model for healthcare resource management and location planning during pandemics
- Competition for medical supplies under stochastic demand in the Covid-19 pandemic: a generalized Nash equilibrium framework
- Resource planning strategies for healthcare systems during a pandemic
mathematical optimizationsupply chain disruptiondemand substitutionhealthcare commoditiesinventory and order managementitem criticality
Applications of mathematical programming (90C90) Inventory, storage, reservoirs (90B05) Transportation, logistics and supply chain management (90B06)
Cites Work
- OR/MS research in disaster operations management
- Optimal inventory policy for two substitutable products with customer service objectives
- A classification of the literature on the planning of substitutable products
- Humanitarian logistics network design under mixed uncertainty
- Two substitutable perishable product disaster inventory systems
- Inventory relocation for overlapping disaster settings in humanitarian operations
- Literature review: the vaccine supply chain
- Two-stage stochastic programming under multivariate risk constraints with an application to humanitarian relief network design
- Inventory decisions for a finite horizon problem with product substitution options and time varying demand
- Pricing strategy and product substitution of bullwhip effect in dual parallel supply chain: aggravation or mitigation?
- Using emerging technologies to improve the sustainability and resilience of supply chains in a fuzzy environment in the context of COVID-19
- Learnings from COVID-19 for managing humanitarian supply chains: systematic literature review and future research directions
Cited In (1)
This page was built for publication: Inventory and order management for healthcare commodities during a pandemic
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q6573354)