Tesis
Resilience elements to combat counterfeit medicines in supply chain
Fecha
2018-02-23Registro en:
Autor
Lima, Flávia Renata Pinho de
Institución
Resumen
Supply chains are becoming more complex and vulnerable to specific disturbances
scenarios, critical to business continuity. Counterfeiting is one of them, especially in
markets where counterfeit products affect directly consumers’ health, such as food,
beverage and medicines. However, few authors have investigated how to analyze this
disturbance from a managerial perspective. This study claims that supply chain resilience
is a dynamic solution applicable to combat a disturbance in constant growth and
innovation: counterfeiting. To bridge this gap, namely the lack of understanding in how
to increase resilience to counterfeits, the purpose of this study is to understand how
resilience elements influence the combat of counterfeit medicines. To do so, we
developed systematic literature review, using the QDA Miner software to support the
content analysis. After a careful screening, we selected 84 articles between 2002 and
Oct/2016. The systematic review reveals 13 resilience elements and 16 counterfeit anti-
measures. Furthermore, reengineering, collaboration, visibility, innovation, SCR culture
and trust appeared as six key-elements to combat counterfeit. After a literature review,
we conducted an empirical research – case study, to pursue our exploratory purpose. The
case study encompasses two medicines supply chains, with two pharmaceuticals (focal
companies) and members downstream, and agencies and associations that work across
the medicines supply chain to combat counterfeits. The empirical analysis enabled a
deeper investigation of the resilience elements and counterfeit anti-measures applied. Our
findings show that, in accordance with literature, collaboration, trust and visibility, are
crucial elements to strengthen resilience against counterfeiters. Furthermore, different
from literature review, information sharing and sensing appeared as elements highly
associated in counterfeit combat, leveraged by the existence of a huge amount of data and
the possibility of improving the decision-making process. Thus, this study contributes to
the field by (i) proposing a framework for increasing resilience to counterfeit in medicines
supply chain, which characterizes the dynamics among resilience elements and
counterfeit anti-measures and discusses the role of collaboration and information sharing
such as barriers to increase resilience. (ii) By suggesting new avenues of research, such
as exploring tradeoffs between resilience and anti-counterfeit literature, investigating the
effectiveness of implementing each resilience element in counterfeit combat, and
analyzing different sectors highly targeted by counterfeiters, such as fashion and food.