Delivery Of COVID-19 Vaccine: DHL Study Shows How Public And Private Sector Can Partner For Success

Global delivery
of 10 billion doses of serum needs scaled-up medical supply chains; White paper
identifies critical challenges in COVID-19 logistics; A framework is provided
to tackle future health emergencies beyond COVID-19.
With first emergency use authorizations for COVID-19 vaccines expected to be
effective in the last quarter of 2020, logistics providers are challenged to
rapidly establish medical supply chains to deliver serums of unparalleled
amounts of more than ten billion doses worldwide. DHL, working with McKinsey
& Company as analytics partner, is therefore publishing a white paper on
delivering stable logistics for vaccines and medical goods during COVID-19, and
future health crises.
Currently, more than 250 vaccines across seven platforms are being developed
and trialed. As COVID-19 vaccines have leapfrogged development phases,
stringent temperature requirements (up to -80°C) are likely to be imposed for
certain vaccines to ensure that their efficacy is maintained during
transportation and warehousing. This poses novel logistics challenges to the
existing medical supply chain that conventionally distributes vaccines at
~2–8°C. In the paper, DHL evaluates how the transport of vaccines as highly
temperature-sensitive product can be managed effectively to combat the further
spread of the virus. The scope of this task is immense: To provide global
coverage of COVID-19 vaccines, up to ~200,000 pallet shipments and ~15 million
deliveries in cooling boxes as well as ~15,000 flights will be required across
the various supply chain set-ups.
“The COVID-19 crisis emerged with an unprecedented breadth and impact. It
required governments, businesses, and the logistics industry alike to adapt
quickly to new challenges. As a world leader in logistics, we want to share our
experience of operating during one of the biggest health crises in recent
history, in order to develop strategies in an ever-more connected world”,
explains Katja Busch, Chief Commercial Officer DHL. “To protect lives against
the pandemic, governments have moved towards a more active role in medical
supply chains. Over the past few months, we have demonstrated that sufficient
planning and appropriate partnerships within the supply chain can play a key
role as governments work to secure critical medical supplies during health
emergencies such as this.”
Since the outbreak of the pandemic, demand for medical supplies has surged. For
example, UNICEF sourced 100 times more face masks and 2,000 times more medical
gloves than in 2019. Bringing medical supplies from their distant sources to
use at the frontline has been one of the most crucial activities in pandemic
response management in the first phase of the health emergency. For PPE
specifically, inbound logistics were a major challenge due to geographically
concentrated production, limited airfreight capacity and a lack of inbound
quality checks. To ensure stable medical supply in a future health crisis, a
comprehensive setup of public health crisis strategies and structures needs to
be established by governments with partnerships from both public and private
sectors.
To kick start the dialogue among the different actors and improve pandemic
resilience in medical supply logistics, DHL provides a framework for the
cooperation of logistics companies with authorities, politicians, NGOs as well
as the life sciences industry. The framework helps to establish measures to
ensure the most stable and safe supply chains possible. Besides an emergency
response plan, this includes a partnership network, strong physical logistics
infrastructure and IT-enabled supply chain transparency. Lastly, a response
unit with a clear mandate should be put in place to implement all critical
activities at short notice.








