Countries in the European Region had repeatedly experienced supply chain challenges, such as shortages of antigens, stockouts and interruptions in immunization services (1)despite marked improvements over the last decade. The unfolding COVID-19 pandemic has further disrupted international, regional and local supply chains, undermining national response efforts and putting a strain on other critical and routine health interventions.
Evaluating and strengthening national supply chains
This exercise provides government decision-makers with a formal baseline for each supply chain area, links targeted priority investments against evidence of need, outlines technical assistance needs from Partners, and leads to the development of national supply chain-strengthening response plans that expand access to essential medicines and health products for all.
The outcome will help ensure successful transition of countries towards financial and technical sustainability as they migrate from the Global Fund support. It will also determine countries’ readiness level and management capacity for the deployment of the COVID-19 tests, treatments and vaccines.
Contributing to these global efforts within the Access to COVID-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator collaboration umbrella, WHO/Europe and UNICEF are expanding the scope of the UNICEF supply chain maturity model to assess the resiliency and health emergency preparedness capacity of national supply chains to withstand future shocks, operate at minimum scale, or increase people’s access to, and use of, health services and commodities.
The launch of an online version of the maturity model and associated user guidelines on UNICEF’s Agora learning platform will provide additional opportunities for governments to take ownership of the tool and review the progress of the interventions deployed as part of their implementation roadmap.