Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic

The case illustrates the inventory management dilemma at The Star Clinic, a mobile medical clinic. The resident doctor at the clinic prefers commonly prescribed medicines, in particular Panadol, a brand of paracetamol (a pain relief drug), to be well stocked whereas the procurement manager seeks to...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: ZELLER, Alan, WEE, Kwan Eng, CHEAH, Sin Mei
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/397
https://smu.sharepoint.com/sites/admin/CMP/cases/SMU-21-BATCH%20%5BPDF-Pic%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D.pdf?CT=1641873083115&OR=ItemsView
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Singapore Management University
Language: English
id sg-smu-ink.cases_coll_all-1387
record_format dspace
spelling sg-smu-ink.cases_coll_all-13872022-06-22T06:41:24Z Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic ZELLER, Alan WEE, Kwan Eng CHEAH, Sin Mei The case illustrates the inventory management dilemma at The Star Clinic, a mobile medical clinic. The resident doctor at the clinic prefers commonly prescribed medicines, in particular Panadol, a brand of paracetamol (a pain relief drug), to be well stocked whereas the procurement manager seeks to minimise the holding cost of medicines. Wanting to set a very high patient service level, the doctor is demanding paracetamol to be readily available and dispensable at all times in the clinic. Patients should not need to wait three days before the next batch of stock arrives. On the contrary, the procurement manager adopts a financial perspective and focuses on the profit-and-loss reporting of the company. How can the clinic resolve the dilemma and enhance its inventory allocation and service levels? The case is suitable for undergraduate classes on supply chain management or a postgraduate foundation course on inventory management. Students will learn to evaluate two models—continuous review inventory system and periodic review inventory system—and choose one that best fits the business needs. Through calculations of the re-order point, re-order quantity and order-up-to-level, they will learn to resolve the trade-off between meeting service levels and minimising inventory holding cost. 2022-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/397 https://smu.sharepoint.com/sites/admin/CMP/cases/SMU-21-BATCH%20%5BPDF-Pic%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D.pdf?CT=1641873083115&OR=ItemsView Case Collection eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Inventory management Demand analysis Operating projections Operations strategy Operational effectiveness Sales forecasting Operations and Supply Chain Management
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic Inventory management
Demand analysis
Operating projections
Operations strategy
Operational effectiveness
Sales forecasting
Operations and Supply Chain Management
spellingShingle Inventory management
Demand analysis
Operating projections
Operations strategy
Operational effectiveness
Sales forecasting
Operations and Supply Chain Management
ZELLER, Alan
WEE, Kwan Eng
CHEAH, Sin Mei
Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
description The case illustrates the inventory management dilemma at The Star Clinic, a mobile medical clinic. The resident doctor at the clinic prefers commonly prescribed medicines, in particular Panadol, a brand of paracetamol (a pain relief drug), to be well stocked whereas the procurement manager seeks to minimise the holding cost of medicines. Wanting to set a very high patient service level, the doctor is demanding paracetamol to be readily available and dispensable at all times in the clinic. Patients should not need to wait three days before the next batch of stock arrives. On the contrary, the procurement manager adopts a financial perspective and focuses on the profit-and-loss reporting of the company. How can the clinic resolve the dilemma and enhance its inventory allocation and service levels? The case is suitable for undergraduate classes on supply chain management or a postgraduate foundation course on inventory management. Students will learn to evaluate two models—continuous review inventory system and periodic review inventory system—and choose one that best fits the business needs. Through calculations of the re-order point, re-order quantity and order-up-to-level, they will learn to resolve the trade-off between meeting service levels and minimising inventory holding cost.
format text
author ZELLER, Alan
WEE, Kwan Eng
CHEAH, Sin Mei
author_facet ZELLER, Alan
WEE, Kwan Eng
CHEAH, Sin Mei
author_sort ZELLER, Alan
title Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
title_short Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
title_full Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
title_fullStr Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
title_full_unstemmed Stock-up vs stock-out: The inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
title_sort stock-up vs stock-out: the inventory management dilemma at a mobile clinic
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2022
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/cases_coll_all/397
https://smu.sharepoint.com/sites/admin/CMP/cases/SMU-21-BATCH%20%5BPDF-Pic%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D/SMU-21-0039%20%5BStock-up%20Stock-out%5D.pdf?CT=1641873083115&OR=ItemsView
_version_ 1794549841280368640