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  • Leadership Perspectives

A featured contribution from Leadership Perspectives: a curated forum reserved for leaders nominated by our subscribers and vetted by the Healthcare Business Review Advisory Board.

Finger Lakes Health

Will Gregory, DHA, MBA, MSIS, FACHDM, FAHRMM, CHFP, CLSSBB, CMRP, CPHQ, CRCR, CSAF, CSAPM, CSBI, CSPPM, CSPR, CVAHP, Director of Materials Management

Beyond Cost Savings: The Strategic Value of Materials Management in Modern Healthcare

Supply Closet Shockwaves


The landfall of Hurricane Helene in North Carolina last Fall decimated one of our biggest IV-fluid plants. Within a few days, hospitals nationwide were cancelling elective procedures, rationing dialysis, and searching through backorders for every saline bag. A Wall Street Journal article wrote that supply chain directors described it as “a sprint with no finish line.” It exposed a truth clinicians sensed, but few senior leaders quantified: materials management is more than a line-item expense- it is mission-critical infrastructure.


From Cost Centers to Control Towers


Supply chain leaders have been historically measured, almost exclusively, on how much they could trim purchase prices. That metric is still vital. According to healthcaredive. com, U.S. hospitals spent approximately $25.7 billion on unneeded or mismanaged supplies as of 2019, according to an analysis of more than 2,100 facilities.


It isn’t a straightforward problem, as product shortages and geopolitical turmoil have widened the conversation. Per Premier’s Supply Chain Resiliency survey, 65% of hospital providers listed cost pressures as their most significant barrier, and nearly 80% predicted that disruption would persist or worsen in the coming year.


The message we are seeing is unambiguous: just savings are insufficient. A modern materials management must focus on areas such as financial stewardship, operational resilience, and clinical quality, usually simultaneously.


Resilience & Risk: Continuity of Care


The IV shortage is only one of the latest cautionary tales. Premier calculated that a mid-size health system gives up $3.5 million in added expense and $350,000 in lost revenue yearly due to product shortages. This is in addition to clinical frustration.


To address this, strategic supply chain leaders are responding with:


• Diversification of sources. More emphasis is being placed on domestic production and near-shore manufacturing. Support comes from group purchasing organizations (GPOs) that reward redundancy instead of razor-thin pricing.


• Scenario planning. Modeling that allows layers of real-time supplier performance data with storm forecasts, cyber risk scores, and tariff alerts.


• Emergency stockpiles with expiration strategies that rotate inventory before expiration. This helps to avoid the costly expiration of consumables.


Such strategies allow materials management to pivot from reactive firefighting to proactive risk governance.


AI and Data: Counting Boxes to Creating Insights


Some cutting-edge systems are replacing manual par levels with predictive analytics. Mayo Clinic has autonomous robots that pick orders while machine-learning algorithms manage auto-replenishment, mine contracts for hidden savings, and identify sustainability concerns for multi-year contracts. According to BusinessInsider.com, the Cleveland Clinic uses AI document recognition to transform vendor bill sheets into purchase orders. This saves staff about “20 minutes per click-heavy transaction.”


A modern materials management must focus on areas such as financial stewardship, operational resilience, and clinical quality, usually simultaneously


Why does it matter?


• Waste reduction. AI helps to create a delicate balance between over-stocking and canceling surgeries due to stock-outs.


• Labor reallocation. Automating tedious data entry enables professionals to pivot to value analysis, supplier negotiations, and cross-functional projects.


• Faster clinical response. Predictive models can flag shortages weeks prior. This gives teams time to vet equivalent products and avoid case delays.


SupplyChainBrain.com states that 2025 will be “the year of the AI revolution in healthcare supply chains.” They forecast a coming tipping point when those organizations that invest in algorithms and robotics will be ahead regarding costs and care metrics.


Linking Supplies to Outcomes and Revenue


Value-based care contracts are more often penalizing adverse events and rewarding efficiency. According to Jmir.org, every time an implant tray is misplaced or an antibiotic is delayed, it can ripple through quality metrics, readmission rates, and reimbursement.


Forward-thinking supply chain leaders are tracking:


• Product to procedure profitability. SKU-level spend is linked to contribution margin.


• Compliance standardization. Monitor compliance with product formularies that balance cost, efficacy, and safety.


• Clinical variation. Identifying and flagging outliers where usage deviates from evidence-based norms may signal device concerns or gaps in training.


This leads to improved outcomes and a demonstrable contribution to margin growth.


Sustainability & Stewardship


Reporting on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) is no longer optional for larger health systems. Supply chains have been shown to generate approximately two-thirds of the carbon footprint of a hospital. According to CardinalHealth.com, some of the high-performers are:


• Where clinically appropriate, switch to re-processable or biodegradable kits.


• Collaborate with vendors on reverse logistics and reducing packaging.


• RFID or computer vision cuts expirations by up to 50%.


Sustainability then becomes another strategic level, which can attract eco-focused patients, staff, and investors, all while trimming waste.


From Buyer to Boardroom Advisor


Talent needs grow with the growth of responsibility. Material managers of the future will likely need:


• Financial Acumen for total-cost-of-ownership modeling.


• Data literacy to integrate dashboards and guide AI initiatives.


• Change management skills to align clinicals, finance, and IT around shared metrics.


Departments that have met these criteria are rapidly gaining a seat at the table.


Five Strategic Moves For 2025


1. Identify mission-critical SKUs and dual source at least 20% by volume.


2. Invest in an end-to-end data platform before bolting on AI solutions.


3. Bundle sustainability into RFP scoring as a weighted criterion.


4. Connect supply KPIs to clinical dashboards so clinicians see the data in the same portals they use for other areas.


5. Launch a “materials management/supply chain fellowship” to cultivate the next generation of leaders versed in finance, informatics, and operations.


A Strategic Imperative whose time has Arrived


Product shortages, soaring inflation, tariffs, and the surge of AI tools have come together to raise materials management from an administrative function to a strategic command center. Organizations that seize the moment through investing in data, diversifying risk, and linking supplies directly to outcomes will control costs, safeguard patient care, enhance clinical satisfaction, and future-proof operations against the next hurricane or other disaster.


The articles from these contributors are based on their personal expertise and viewpoints, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of their employers or affiliated organizations.

Weekly Brief

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The Leadership Perspectives forum brings together voices shaping the healthcare ecosystem. Participation is by invitation only. It features leaders who are not merely observing changes in care delivery, but actively contributing to them through clinical, operational, and patient-focused insights.

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  • University of Chicago Medicine Ian O'Malley, Executive Director Strategic Sourcing Strategic Sourcing that Strengthens Care, Quality and Resilience
  • University Health Cesar A. Roman, Director of Strategic Sourcing and Procurement Operations The Hidden Costs of Vendor Contracts: How Boilerplate Terms Can Undermine Hospital Budgets
  • Holy Name Medical Center Don Ecker, Vice President of Integrated Services Balancing Quality and Efficiency in Healthcare Supply Chains
  • Yale New Haven Health James Fusco, Director of Strategic Sourcing The Strategic Voice Defining the Future of Hospital Supply Chains
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