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Postdisaster Volatility of Blood Donations in an Unsteady Blood Supply Chain

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 10:50 authored by Zahra Hosseinifard, Babak AbbasiBabak Abbasi, Masih FadakiMasih Fadaki, Nigel Clay
The stochastic behavior of both transfusion (demand) and blood donations (collection) is a challenge for the blood supply chain. Although donations are not fully within the control of blood supply chain, the blood service can marginally moderate it by postponing appointments in the case of having an overstock, or by triggering a call for additional blood when faced with shortages. Such shortages are often observed as a consequence of catastrophic events. Past studies show that the response to a call for blood after a disaster is substantive. Yet the consequential impact on the supply chain is not well understood. This is due to the perishability of blood and the fact that donors are not eligible to give blood for a certain period after a donation has been made. In this study, the donation process is modeled with a Markov chain and the impact of a call for blood resulting from a disaster is investigated. This article highlights new actionable insights that aid planners to mitigate the negative impacts of a substantial response to a call for blood.

History

Journal

Decision Sciences

Volume

51

Issue

2

Start page

255

End page

281

Total pages

27

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2019 Decision Sciences Institute

Former Identifier

2006092798

Esploro creation date

2020-09-08

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