The Provider Perspective on Building Supply Chain Resiliency (Re-engineering the Health Care Supply Chain: CQO Thought Leader Discussion Series)

By AHRMM

AHRMM Webinar Image

 

Price: Member: FREE  |  Non-Member: $49.00

CEC Hours: 1

Order Webinar

  

 

Re-engineering the Health Care Supply Chain: A CQO Thought Leader Discussion Series” is hosted by AHRMM's Cost, Quality and Outcomes (CQO) Movement sponsors. This webinar series focuses on how the health care supply chain will evolve and be more resilient in the post-pandemic environment.

Health care supply chain resiliency is interdependent upon the resiliency of providers, data accuracy, and collaboration with manufacturers and distributors. In the second webinar of the CQO Thought Leader Discussion Series, hear provider panelists discuss their post-pandemic approach to their business continuity programs, working with non-traditional buyers, diversifying their suppliers and the increased focus on supply chain analytics.

For future webinars in this series, visit the AHRMM Calendar.

 

Moderator: Michael Schiller, Senior Director of Supply Chain, AHRMM

Panelists:

  • David Peck, Vice President of Supply Chain Management, Houston Methodist
  • Bob Hornsby, System Director, Supply Chain Management, Riverside Health System
  • Erich Heneke, PhD, CMA, CFE Director of Business Integrity & Continuity, Mayo Clinic

 

Sponsored By:

CQO Sponsors

Related Resources

On-Demand Educational Webinars
The robust supply chain department of today is clinically integrated. Now, clinicians and supply chain professionals are actively working together to…
Webcast
Roy Henry, strategic analyst from University of Miami, explores how clinical integration can evolve your supply chain while discussing the value of
Webcast
In today’s value based health care market, reimbursement is tied to patient outcomes.
Webcast
Dave Reed, vice president, healthcare solutions, Cook Medical, discusses the generational gap in health care supply chain leadership as the field f
Webcast
Colleen Cusick, director of materials management at Johns Hopkins Health System, discusses how she created a basic supply chain education program f