Learnings from COVID-19 for managing humanitarian supply chains: systematic literature review and future research directions

Pravin Kumar, Rajesh Kumar Singh, Azar Shahgholian

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has been experienced as the most significant global disaster after the Spanish flue in 1918. Millions of people lost their life due to a lack of preparedness and ineffective strategies for managing humanitarian supply chains (HSC). Based on the learnings from this pandemic outbreak, different strategies for managing the effective HSC have been explored in the present context of pandemics through a systematic literature review. The findings highlight some of the major challenges faced during the COVID-19 pandemic, such as lack of planning and preparedness, extended shortages of essential lifesaving items, inadequate lab capacity, lack of transparency and visibility, inefficient distribution network, high response time, dependencies on single sourcing for the medical equipment and medicines, lack of the right information on time, and lack of awareness about the protocol for the treatment of the viral disease. Some of the significant learnings observed from this analysis are the use of multiple sourcing of essential items, joint procurement, improving collaboration among all stakeholders, applications of IoT and blockchain technologies for improving tracking and traceability of essential commodities, application of data analytics tools for accurate prediction of next possible COVID wave/disruptions and optimization of distribution network. Limited studies are focused on finding solutions to these problems in managing HSC. Therefore, as a future scope, researchers could find solutions to optimizing the distribution network in context to pandemics, improving tracing and tracking of items during sudden demand, improving trust and collaborations among different agencies involved in HSC.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)899-935
Number of pages37
JournalAnnals of Operations Research
Volume335
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • Collaboration
  • Coordination
  • Humanitarian supply chains
  • Poverty and food security
  • Prepositioning
  • Swift trust
  • Systematic literature review

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