Authors
Emily P Williams, Paul R Harper, Daniel Gartner
Publication date
2020/7/2
Source
IISE Transactions on Healthcare Systems Engineering
Volume
10
Issue
3
Pages
200-211
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Human blood is a scarce resource and its role in healthcare is fundamental, with donated blood saving the lives of many on a daily basis. The blood supply chain is responsible for the transfer of blood from donor to the recipient, but the availability of such an invaluable resource as human blood is ultimately attributable to the many voluntary donors. Thus, the efficiency of the collection of donated blood is crucial to the downstream effectiveness of the blood supply chain. We provide a detailed review on the use of quantitative methods for the process of blood collection from donors. We describe the functional areas which are appointment scheduling, collection policy, crisis situation, donor demographics, location/clinic planning, staff utilization and vehicle routing. Furthermore, we analyze the existing literature with regards to methods, modeling objectives and the planning levels such as strategic, tactical and …
Total citations
20212022202320243692
Scholar articles
EP Williams, PR Harper, D Gartner - IISE Transactions on Healthcare Systems Engineering, 2020