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Supply Chain Coordination and Influenza Vaccination David Simchi-Levi Massachusetts Institute of Technology •Joint work with Stephen E. Chick (INSEAD) and Hamed Mamani (MIT) March 2007 The Influenza Pandemic Globally, annual influenza outbreaks result in 250,000 to 500,000 deaths 20,000 deaths and 100,000 hospitalizations in the US Social costs of influenza vary between $1M-$6M per 100,000 inhabitant yearly in industrialized countries The “Spanish flu” (H1N1) of 1918 killed 20–40 million people worldwide Source: Report by the World Health Organization, 2005 Influenza Vaccination Vaccination is a principal tool for controlling influenza Reduces the risk of infection to exposed individuals (Longini et al., 1978) Reduces the probability of transmission from a vaccinated individual infected with influenza (Longini et al., 1978) Vaccination is cost effective Immunization in elderly saved $117 per person in medical costs (Nichol et al 1994) Systematic children vaccination can result in significant population-wide benefits (Weycker at al 2005) The Production and Delivery Process Flu season Growing viruses in millions of fertilized eggs Northern hemisphere Immunity takes About 2 weeks Flu vaccine supply chain challenges Operational challenges Beginning of the value chain End of the value chain Strain selection Vaccine allocation and delivery logistics Middle of the value chain Align incentives of the different parties involved Flu vaccine challenges Change of virus over time Antigenic drift Seasonal epidemics Antigenic shift strain selection Global pandemics Wu et al. develop an optimization model of antigenic changes Current vaccination policy is reasonably effective Develop some heuristics to improve selection process Flu vaccine supply chain challenges Operational challenges Beginning of the value chain End of the value chain Strain selection Vaccine allocation and delivery logistics Middle of the value chain Align incentives of the different parties involved Influenza vaccine challenges allocation and delivery Vaccine allocation to different subpopulations (Hill and Longini 2003): mathematical model of optimally allocating vaccine to different subpopulations (Weycker et al 2005): stochastic simulation model to illustrate the benefit of vaccination of certain individuals (children) Flu vaccine supply chain challenges Operational challenges Beginning of the value chain End of the value chain Strain selection Vaccine allocation and delivery logistics Middle of the value chain Align incentives of the different parties involved The different players and their objectives Governments (CDC in US), State health departments Balance the public health benefits and the vaccination program costs Focus on high-risk individuals. In the US, in 1999, 66.9% of individuals of age 65 and older were vaccinated (GAO-2001). The different players and their objectives Manufacturer Production volume and the need for profitability Highly uncertain production yield due to biological nature of production process Considerable shortage of flu vaccination in 2000-01. According to the US GAO Considerable shortage in 2003-04 Unanticipated problems growing the new influenza strains Quality control issues raised by FDA Early break of the epidemic Significant shortage in 2004-05 Chiron’s manufacturing plant in the U.K. was shut down due to bacterial contamination Research on Supply Contracts Focus on supply chain with Single supplier and single retailer Order Quantities; Production levels Coordinating contracts Global optimization Nash equilibrium Flexible Supply Contracts Fixed Production Cost =$100,000 Variable Production Cost=$35 Wholesale Price =$80 Selling Price=$125 Salvage Value=$20 Manufacturer Manufacturer DC Retail DC Stores Demand Scenarios Sales 18 00 0 16 00 0 14 00 0 12 00 0 10 00 0 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 80 00 Probability Demand Scenarios Distributor Expected Profit Expected Profit 500000 400000 300000 200000 100000 0 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 Order Quantity 16000 18000 20000 Distributor Expected Profit Expected Profit 500000 400000 300000 200000 100000 0 6000 8000 10000 12000 14000 Order Quantity 16000 18000 20000 Supply Contracts (cont.) Distributor optimal order quantity is 12,000 units Distributor expected profit is $470,000 Manufacturer profit is $440,000 Supply Chain Profit is $910,000 –IS there anything that the distributor and manufacturer can do to increase the profit of both? Supply Contracts Fixed Production Cost =$100,000 Variable Production Cost=$35 Wholesale Price =$80 Selling Price=$125 Salvage Value=$20 Manufacturer Manufacturer DC Retail DC Stores Retailer Profit (Buy Back=$55) Retailer Profit 600,000 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 Order Quantity Retailer Profit (Buy Back=$55) Retailer Profit 600,000 $513,800 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 Order Quantity Manufacturer Profit (Buy Back=$55) 500,000 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 60 00 70 00 80 00 90 00 10 00 0 11 00 0 12 00 0 13 00 0 14 00 0 15 00 0 16 00 0 17 00 0 18 00 0 Manufacturer Profit 600,000 Production Quantity Manufacturer Profit (Buy Back=$55) 500,000 $471,900 400,000 300,000 200,000 100,000 0 60 00 70 00 80 00 90 00 10 00 0 11 00 0 12 00 0 13 00 0 14 00 0 15 00 0 16 00 0 17 00 0 18 00 0 Manufacturer Profit 600,000 Production Quantity Industrial supply chains Supply contracts: Wholesale price Buyback Revenue sharing Options … Linear cost models Deterministic production Flu vaccine supply chain features nonlinear cost function •Nonlinear effect of infection dynamics Nonlinear cost value Flu vaccine supply chain features uncertain production Inactivated virus vaccine eleven day old embryonated eggs Prediction of number of eggs well in advance egg yields are stochastic based on the strain and eggs Uncertain production yield Introduction Epidemic Modeling Industrial Supply Chains Outline Model description Current challenges Effective supply contracts Infection dynamics Key components in epidemic modeling Initial infected fraction introduced to the population (I0) Basic reproduction number (R0): expected number of secondary infections caused by one infected in an otherwise susceptible, unvaccinated population Infection dynamics Vaccine role: Decreases the probability of infection for a susceptible person by Φ Probability of getting the infection will be multiplied by 1 - Φ If fraction f of population vaccinated R0 decreases to Rf If Rf ≤ 1 outbreak is prevented Critical vaccine fraction: f 0 = min { f : Rf ≤ 1} Infection dynamics f0 Supply chain costs Social costs of the disease On The Counter meds (OTC) Outpatient visit Hospitalization Indirect costs: work days loss Vaccination costs Direct costs: Vaccine purchase Administrative costs Production costs Model Description Government & Healthcare provider Manufacturer Model description assumptions A single manufacturer Homogeneous population Perfect information Government is the purchaser of vaccine determines how many people to vaccinate Game Setting Government & Healthcare provider Manufacturer Model Description system problem System setting Ignores the transaction between the different parties Optimizes the system wide cost Might not be beneficial for one of the parties Model Description system problem Government & Healthcare provider Manufacturer Game Setting vs. System Setting (convex case) Assumption: Manufacturer under produces production risk Potential Insufficient order by the government Supply chain coordination Wholesale price contract: supply contracts Proposition: There is no wholesale price contract that coordinates the supply chain Payback contract: Government agrees to buy any excess production, beyond the desired volume Shifts some of the risk of excess production from the manufacturer Proposition: There is no Payback price contract that coordinates the supply chain Problem: Payback contracts are based on the manufacturer output not on its effort Supply chain coordination cost sharing + (convex case) wholesale discount Wholesale discount / cost sharing contract: Incentive for government to order more Wholesale discount pr(f) Incentive for manufacturer to produce more Cost share pe(f) Theorem: The contract defined above coordinates the supply chain: The optimal government action is f S while the manufacturer production volume is nEs The contract is flexible, that is, it allows any split of the cost benefit within a certain range Summary Uncertain production yield is an important reason for insufficient supply of vaccine Cost sharing contracts can have a major impact on the influenza vaccination supply chain Production risk taken by the manufacturers maybe the reason why only a small number of manufacturer exists