2.1. Patient-Centric Facility Management in Healthcare Environment
The exploration of how FM can be improved and differentiated in a healthcare environment is not new in the academic field [
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
13]. However, it was not until recently that researchers have paid attention to investigating how patients and their demographic data can be utilized to provide a patient-centric FM [
14]. Patient-centric facility management in this paper is defined as “the integration of processes within a healthcare organization to deliver and maintain required services which support efficient and timely medical care activities to meet patients’ needs.” This is a synthetic definition that combines the Normalization definition of FM [
15] (“the integration of processes within an organization to maintain and develop the agreed services which support and improve the effectiveness of its primary activities”) and Yavorskyi’s [
16] patients-centric criteria for the healthcare sector (“include effective and timely medical care, efficient use of the resources, meeting the patients’ needs and treatment efficiency”). In other words, patient-centric FM aims to meet the patients’ needs by providing healthcare FM service support without interrupting the medical emergency, surgical, specialized chronic care, and rehabilitation services. It is worth noticing that healthcare FM services frequently share quite different characteristics from the other commonly encountered FM environments (e.g., residential buildings, general-purpose offices, etc.) in the following two ways. Firstly, the main content of the hospital FM service is different from other general building types of FM services. For instance, the operation cost of “sterile goods supply” and “maintenance of medical equipment” could take up 42 per cent and 14 per cent of a typical hospital project, which will not be found in an office building’s FM service expenditure [
3]. Secondly, the service standard of healthcare FM is higher than the other general types of building FM services. Taking sterile goods supply as an example, once a surgical kit is opened, no matter its size, the untouched content needs to be sterilized and repacked in any case. The cost of supplying sterile goods is dominated by content (i.e., the surgical operation type) and the quantity, rather than the length of the procedure [
3].
Several important characteristics of FM in the hospital environment are highlighted above. These characteristics make patient-centric FM vital for the digital-era hospital environment. Although the majority of hospital FM consumables are manufactured physical goods that are produced and consumed at different times, some healthcare FM services (e.g., catering services) are delivered and consumed simultaneously [
17]. Therefore, it is essential to collect and analyse the patients’ entry and hospitalization information to predict the busy and off seasons more accurately, in order to ensure that the stocks are sufficient for both medical and non-medical consumables. Next, it is also crucial for integrating the patient’s demographic or personal properties into the service delivery process. For example, the nutrition, medical consumables, ventilation and indoor air quality requirements for patients with different types and stages of diseases vary significantly. Accurate forecasting of the patients’ demand for different medical and non-medical consumables is vital in predicting the aggregate FM service demand within a specified time. Lastly, patients are always the main service objects for healthcare facility management in hospitals. Again, taking the hospital’s catering service as an example, some patients are likely to require a special meal due to the specific diet style or allergy, making the service more customized to patients’ needs rather than just providing a standardized FM product. It is suggested that patients’ diverse perspectives should be valued in designing FM processes [
17].
With the patient-centric FM thinking involved, bottleneck problems can be better tackled in the facilities management process of hospitals. Firstly, during healthcare-service delivery, long waiting times are often treated as a symbol of low service quality [
18]. Patients are still suffering long waiting times, “bed-blockers”, and under-maintained facilities (e.g., the unplanned maintenance of operating theatres), which negatively impact their quality of life due to their potentially worsening condition when waiting to receive treatment. Unplanned maintenance and equipment malfunction are two of the main causes of such issues. It is suggested that the facility manager lacks the patients’ demographic information, such as length of stay, which stops the FM manager from further predicting the hospital facilities’ utilization level to make a better facility maintenance plan that minimizes the disruption of the hospital’s specialized medical activities. The second aspect of improvement is communication. It is suggested that the communication with the hospital supply chain partners could also be further improved with more frequent contact [
19,
20]. Digital logistics management should be designed to integrate patients’ information in a timely manner, allowing for more agile hospital logistics management. The lack of information integration is a major obstacle for patient-centric FM in a digital logistics management environment. In the current hospital information management framework, there is only very limited patient-centric information communication between the major medical department and the FM department. However, without the information integration between the different departments, the department-wise decision is frequently more focused on the short-term benefits of their own department, rather than the long-term benefits of the entire organization/hospital [
21]. In summary, the new digitized hospital logistics management environment should integrate FM information flow with patient-related information flow inside the hospital (e.g., pharmaceutical information flow).
2.2. Logistics Management and Pharmaceutical Service
With the increase in public health emergencies and the ageing population, the surge in healthcare demand poses severe challenges to the capabilities of healthcare infrastructure [
22,
23]. The management capability to suddenly increase inpatients has a significant impact on the healthcare facility resilience, such as the bed-occupancy levels and the stability of flows into the hospitals. One of the main factors for FM is the patients’ admission time. For example, prioritizing and differentiating the admission time of patients with different symptom levels can greatly relieve the capacity and management pressure of healthcare facilities and FM during the COVID-19 period. Furthermore, to provide satisfactory health services and hospital environments, optimizing healthcare resource supply and allocation is one of the most significant global issues in terms of sustainability and equity [
24]. Healthcare logistics stands for an integrated approach to healthcare supply-chain design, holding the potential to deal with the emerging demand shortage and efficiency improvement needs from the hospital FM perspectives [
25]. In hospitals, logistics management consists of conventional physical flows, associated information flows and other emerging flows, such as patients, throughout the care chain [
26]. Supply chain management is the backbone of these healthcare deliveries. The practice of the healthcare supply chain is defined as “a set of activities undertaken in an organization that helps the organization in the effective management of its supply chain by integrating its stakeholders such as manufacturers, distributors, suppliers and customers” [
27]. By supporting the supply chain with more focus on patients, especially the admission time of patients, the healthcare logistics management can flexibly adjust the stock and promote the efficiency of the hospital pharmacy and FM. Although various healthcare tasks (e.g., diagnosis, treatment, and management) put pressure on logistics, they also generate a large scale of daily datasets [
12,
28]. Capturing added value from these datasets is expected to benefit the hospital information flows and further improve the healthcare supply chain and operational efficiency [
26]. Besides, the adoption of digital technologies and methods can transform how patients receive healthcare services by utilizing these datasets for logistics improvement schemes. In practice, healthcare organizations are trying to acquire these advanced capabilities to improve logistics management in terms of finance, administration and medicine.
Existing studies have widely explored potential solutions to advance these capabilities. However, few of them focus on patient-centric solutions. Further, various challenges arise from (1) logistic issues; (2) digitalization issues. For healthcare logistics, the main challenges that are identified in the literature include overstocking [
29], inventory shrinkage [
30], fragmented processes [
31], delivery delay [
32] and unpredictability [
33]. These challenges reflect that many processes are still paper-based labour-intensive activities in healthcare logistics and lack standardization, visibility, and traceability. Conventional approaches to healthcare logistics prevent the capture of advanced capabilities. The main hurdles to digital transformation in healthcare services involve technological factors, such as information flow integration/sharing, data capturing that is associated with patients and personal health, algorithms, performance-measurement tools, and nontechnological barriers, such as cultural resistance, organizational structure and governance [
34]. These phenomena reflect that the introduction of digital technology is still a rhetoric-based initiative. Further, there is still long way to go for the industry to fully embrace digitalization, which is not a last mile problem. With the progress of digitalization, if these obstacles are not resolved appropriately, they may fail the transformation, and the operational efficiency may be even worse than conventional logistic methods.
The aim of pharmaceutical logistics is “placing the right drugs and medical supplies, in the right quantities, in the right conditions, at the right health service delivery points, at the right time, for the right patients/users and for the right cost” [
35]. There is a four-step process from the acquisition in the market to the distribution to wards: (1) drug reception and warehouse/pharmacy operations; (2) request and validation; (3) transportation; (4) ward drug management [
36]. However, there are existing conventional logistics management problems. For example, improper hospital drug inventories may cause shortages or stagnant supplies. Besides, traditional logistics basically occurs without the assistance of digital technologies. Subsequently, many studies notice that introducing information and communication technology will be an essential strategy to improve patient safety and reduce drug consumption. Some techniques have been introduced into logistics management to facilitate the efficiency improvement of pharmaceutical services, including geographic information systems [
37], beacon technology [
38], unmanned aerial vehicles [
39], blockchain [
40] and so on. A series of advanced digital approaches are necessary to develop enhanced analytical capabilities for the existing conventional logistics management problems that are mentioned above, one of which is to accurately forecast the pharmaceutical demands for optimizing the supplies and inventory of drugs, medicines, and medical devices.
Some studies have applied advanced computing techniques to forecast, plan or monitor the pharmaceutical supply chain. Qin et al. [
35] introduced cluster computing to monitor and manage drug logistics. Ershadi and Ershadi [
41] proposed a multi-objective optimization model to plan the pharmaceutical supply chain. Du et al. [
42] combined the genetic algorithm with a BP neural network for drug inventory management. Nikzad et al. [
43] proposed a two-stage stochastic programming approach for drug inventory routing problems. Saedi et al. [
6] developed a stochastic optimization framework to find the optimal drug stock levels and order quantity levels. However, existing studies ignore the fact that hospital service aims to serve patients [
44,
45,
46,
47]. The patient-centric FM perspective is vital in this sense, and it is expected to improve hospital pharmacy inventory-management efficiency, especially for the inpatient departments in hospitals. Thus, there is a research gap to develop a patient-centric demand-forecast procedure for estimating the total amount of pharmaceutical services and products that are needed by integrating digital methods, logistics management and patient-centric FM thinking.