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Premier Healthcare Alliance Endorses Supply Chain Standards

by Barbara Kram, Editor | July 21, 2008
Premier healthcare alliance
CHARLOTTE, N.C. - The Premier healthcare alliance became the first group purchasing organization (GPO) to announce its endorsement of GS1* supply chain standards, which will be required through Premier contracts with medical device manufacturers. Use of the standards will allow for definitive identification of medical products and devices, tracking them through the healthcare system and placing them within a standardized product database, enabling rapid communication about any potential issues. Full adoption of the GS1 standards within contracting and operations at Premier will be implemented over the next five years.

Although the majority of products in America, from peanut butter to bolts and screws, have numbering systems that enable bar codes or radio-frequency identification (RFID) for tracking purposes, no such uniform system exists for medical devices. This means that patients today face a significant risk that a recalled medical device or product could be inadvertently used in their treatment because of the inability to rapidly locate it in the hospital.

Dennis Harrison, president of GS1 Healthcare US*, commented, "This is a huge step forward for the healthcare community. As a GPO, Premier's announcement will have far reaching effects in driving the implementation of GS1 standards across the healthcare supply chain."
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"The collaboration toward standards adoption between Premier and its supplier community will help ensure correct products are delivered to correct locations," said Joe Pleasant, Premier chief information officer and senior vice president. "The outcome will be increased patient safety, a decrease in supply chain costs and faster order-to-cash cycles, leading to significant value for patients and our alliance members."

Premier's endorsement follows years of leadership in the supply chain standards community. Premier played an integral role in Congress passing legislation in October of 2007, requiring the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to put in place a mandatory national unique device identification system.

"This requirement for our medical device supplier community is in synch with the direction the FDA is taking," Pleasant said. "We anticipate the FDA will issue its requirement to manufacturers to use a uniform system that recognizes the GS1 standard. This initiative, which will impact hundreds of thousands of medical devices and supplies, compliments and strengthens the FDA's work to create a uniform and nationwide system."