Supply Chain HRM: Securing Talent When Medicines Stall

 


HRM BLOG SERIES · POST 4

When Medicines Stall and Staff Are Stretched:

How HRM Can Protect the Hospital Supply Chain in Crisis

Lakeside Adventist Hospital · Human Resource Management · 2026

 

Sri Lanka’s economic and fuel crises have exposed how tightly linked people and supplies are in healthcare. When fuel shipments slow, imported medicines are delayed; when staff cannot travel, even available supplies cannot be used effectively. In this post, I explore how HRM at Lakeside Adventist Hospital can strengthen both talent security and supply-chain resilience, drawing on recent research and Sri Lanka’s own experience (Karnamadakala et al., 2024; Razzaq et al., 2024).

 

1. Supply Chains Are Human Chains

Sri Lanka imports around 80% of its medical supplies, and since April 2022 has experienced severe shortages of essential medicines, including antibiotics, vaccines and chemotherapy drugs, due to foreign exchange and import restrictions (WHO, 2021). These shortages, combined with fuel rationing and power cuts, have pushed the health system close to collapse, with doctors reporting cancelled surgeries and rationed equipment (United Nations News, 2022).

Behind every delayed shipment or empty pharmacy shelf is a chain of people: procurement officers, logisticians, storekeepers, pharmacists, nurses and doctors. When this chain is understaffed, poorly trained or demoralised, supply disruptions become even more damaging. Recent work on hospital supply-chain resilience shows that human capabilities anticipation, adaptation, response, recovery and learning are central to keeping supplies flowing and services running (Karnamadakala et al., 2024).

For Lakeside Adventist Hospital, this means HRM must treat supply-chain roles as strategic, not just back-office support.

 

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2. Dynamic Capabilities in the Hospital Supply Chain

A 2024 study on public hospital supply chains highlights three dynamic capabilities that significantly enhance sustainable hospital performance: strategic formulation, leadership, and digital technology competence (Razzaq et al., 2024). These capabilities are built and maintained through HRM:

Strategic Formulation

HR can support supply-chain leaders to engage in scenario planning asking ‘What if fuel supplies drop by 30%?’ or ‘What if a key medicine is unavailable for six weeks?’ and to align workforce planning with these scenarios (Razzaq et al., 2024).

Leadership Development

Supervisors in procurement, pharmacy and logistics need targeted leadership training to make fast, ethical decisions under pressure  such as rationing supplies or prioritising patient groups (Razzaq et al., 2024).

Digital Competence

HR-driven investment in digital skills inventory systems, data dashboards, forecasting tools  allows staff to monitor stock levels, anticipate shortages and coordinate orders more effectively (Razzaq et al., 2024). A 2024 measurement model of hospital supply-chain resilience confirms that resilience depends on staff knowledge, skills and coordination across five dimensions (Karnamadakala et al., 2024).

Chart 1: The Five Dimensions of Hospital Supply-Chain Resilience and HRM’s Role

Resilience Dimension

Definition

HRM Action (Lakeside)

Key Source

Anticipation

Sensing & planning for supply disruptions before they occur

Scenario planning, supply-risk training, procurement role mapping

Karnamadakala et al. (2024)

Adaptation

Adjusting processes and roles in response to changing conditions

Cross-training, flexible rosters, redeployment protocols

Karnamadakala et al. (2024)

Response

Executing rapid decisions under pressure to maintain supply

Leadership training, decision-making authority frameworks

Razzaq et al. (2024)

Recovery

Restoring normal supply and staffing after a disruption

Staff recovery support, post-crisis debriefs, stock replenishment plans

Karnamadakala et al. (2024)

Learning

Capturing lessons from disruptions to improve future resilience

After-action reviews, updated SOPs, knowledge-sharing sessions

Karnamadakala et al. (2024)

Source: Karnamadakala et al. (2024); Razzaq et al. (2024). Resilience dimensions adapted from dynamic capability theory.

 

Chart 2: Three Dynamic Capabilities Linking HRM to Supply-Chain Performance

Dynamic Capability

What It Means

HRM Action

Expected Outcome

Strategic Formulation

Scenario planning and aligning workforce with supply-chain risk forecasts

HR-led scenario workshops; procurement workforce planning

Fewer unplanned stockouts; faster crisis response

Leadership Development

Building decision-making capacity in procurement, pharmacy and logistics leads

Targeted leadership training; ethical decision frameworks

Faster, better rationing and prioritisation decisions

Digital Competence

Equipping staff with inventory, dashboard and forecasting system skills

Digital upskilling programmes; HRIS/ERP training

Real-time stock visibility; earlier shortage alerts

Source: Razzaq et al. (2024). Dynamic capabilities framework applied to Lakeside Adventist Hospital context.

3. The Talent Gap in Healthcare Supply Chains

Globally, healthcare supply chains face a growing ‘war for talent’, with demand for specialised roles vastly outstripping supply (WHO, 2021). Hospitals report high vacancy rates for roles such as cold-chain specialists, quality-assurance leads and transport analysts, even as the volume and complexity of temperature-sensitive shipments continues to grow (WHO, 2021).

This global pattern mirrors Sri Lanka’s situation, where broader workforce shortages, burnout and emigration have reduced the pool of experienced supply-chain and clinical staff (United Nations News, 2022). For Lakeside, this means HRM must not only fill current vacancies but also build a talent pipeline for critical supply-chain roles.

 

Critical supply-chain roles that need proactive HRM attention at Lakeside: • Procurement and contract-management professionals • Storekeepers and inventory controllers • Pharmacy technicians and clinical pharmacists • Data analysts for supply-chain dashboards • Logistics and transport coordinators

 

 Chart 3: Talent Gap Analysis Critical Supply-Chain Roles at Lakeside

Source: Razzaq et al. (2024); WHO (2021). Risk ratings are indicative based on role criticality and current vacancy trends in Sri Lankan hospitals.

4. HRM Actions to Protect People and Supplies at Lakeside

Several concrete HRM actions can support both talent security and supply-chain resilience at Lakeside Adventist Hospital (Karnamadakala et al., 2024; Razzaq et al., 2024):



Chart 4: HRM Levers for Supply-Chain Resilience at Lakeside Adventist Hospital


 

Sources: Karnamadakala et al. (2024); Razzaq et al. (2024); WHO (2021). All examples adapted to Lakeside hospital context.

Use these questions to spark discussion about HRM’s role in supply-chain resilience:

Q1

How could HRM better support supply-chain staff, who often work under pressure but receive less recognition than frontline clinicians?

 

Conclusion

Sri Lanka’s fuel and economic crises have made visible what was always true: supply chains are human chains. The resilience of Lakeside Adventist Hospital’s medicines and supplies depends directly on the quality, capability and wellbeing of the people who manage them. HRM is not peripheral to supply-chain resilience it is its foundation.

By applying dynamic capability theory building strategic formulation, leadership and digital competence and by addressing the talent gap in critical supply-chain roles, Lakeside’s HRM function can help ensure that medicines reach patients, even when fuel is scarce and the pressure is highest.

Drawing on Karnamadakala et al. (2024), Razzaq et al. (2024), WHO (2021) and United Nations News (2022), this post shows that securing people and securing supplies are the same task and HRM is uniquely positioned to lead it.

 

“A hospital’s supply chain is only as strong as the people who run it. HRM builds that strength.”

 

References

Karnamadakala, K., et al. (2024). Confirmation of a measurement model for hospital supply chain resilience using dynamic capability theory. PLOS Global Public Health, 4(5), e11151684. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003111

Razzaq, A., et al. (2024). Assessing the dynamic capabilities and sustainable performance in public hospital supply chains management. Malaysian Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 9(10). https://doi.org/10.47405/mjssh.v9i10.3111

WHO. (2021). Sri Lanka appeal – health emergency context. World Health Organization. https://www.who.int/emergencies/funding/health-emergency-appeals/2022/2023/2023-appeals/appeal-sri-lanka

United Nations News. (2022). Sri Lanka’s economic crisis pushes health system to brink of collapse. United Nations News. https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/08/1124842

 

 


Comments

  1. This is a very thought-provoking discussion on the shift from training to development, clearly highlighting how organizations must move beyond short-term skill building to focus on long-term employee growth and career progression.
    However, how can HR effectively transition from traditional training programs to continuous development strategies while ensuring measurable performance outcomes?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful reflection and for raising such a practical question.

      I think the transition from traditional training to continuous development starts with reframing learning as an ongoing process rather than an event. HR can design development pathways that combine formal training with mentoring, job rotation, coaching, and on-the-job learning, so employees are constantly building capability within real work contexts.

      To ensure measurable performance outcomes, it helps to link development activities directly to clear competency frameworks and role-based KPIs. Regular check-ins, performance reviews, and learning assessments can then track not just participation, but actual application of skills in day-to-day work. Digital HR systems can also support this by capturing learning progress alongside performance data, making development more visible and accountable.

      In essence, the key is aligning continuous learning with organizational goals so that growth is not only encouraged, but also clearly reflected in performance improvement.

      Thank you again for contributing such a meaningful question to the discussion.

      Delete
  2. This blog offers a very timely perspective on how HRM plays a strategic role in strengthening supply chain resilience during disruptions. I really liked how it highlights that supplier failures are not just an operational issue, but also a people and talent challenge. The connection between workforce agility, succession planning, and cross-functional skills development was especially insightful. In today’s uncertain business environment, organizations that proactively invest in adaptable talent pipelines will definitely be better positioned to handle supply chain shocks. A very relevant and well-written discussion!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful feedback. I’m glad the link between HRM and supply chain resilience, especially through talent agility and succession planning, resonated with you.

      In today’s volatile environment, building adaptable skill sets and strong internal talent pipelines really does become a key buffer against disruption, not just an HR concern but an organisational survival strategy.

      Appreciate you taking the time to engage with the discussion.

      Delete
  3. This is a very powerful and insightful blog that highlights a critical yet often overlooked area in healthcare. I really like how you connected HRM with supply chain resilience and showed how people truly are at the heart of the system.

    Your use of real-world context and research makes the discussion even more impactful, and the practical HRM actions add strong value. The message that “supply chains are human chains” really stands out and stays with the reader.

    Overall, a meaningful and well-crafted piece—great work! 💥❤️

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you so much for your kind and encouraging words. I’m really glad the idea that “supply chains are human chains” resonated with you that was a central message I hoped would stay with readers.

      It means a lot that you found the real-world context and practical HRM actions valuable. Your feedback truly reinforces the importance of viewing supply chain challenges through a people-focused lens.

      Appreciate you taking the time to share such thoughtful reflections.

      Delete
  4. This was a nice read. Your blog post effectively connects HRM strategy to healthcare supply chain resilience, offering practical frameworks for crisis preparedness through dynamic capabilities and talent pipeline development. I’m curious to know, What specific HRM action would you prioritize first at Lakeside Adventist Hospital: cross-training staff for supply-chain flexibility, or investing in the digital inventory dashboards?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful comment I’m glad the link between HRM strategy and supply chain resilience came through clearly.

      If I had to prioritise, I would lean slightly toward cross-training staff first. In a crisis, having people who can step into multiple roles provides immediate flexibility and continuity, even when systems or resources are constrained. That said, digital inventory dashboards are equally important as an enabler, especially for visibility and decision-making.

      Ideally, the real value comes when both are developed together capable people supported by the right systems.

      Appreciate you raising such a practical and well-framed question.

      Delete
  5. This is a very strong and original topic because it connects HRM with supply chain disruption in a healthcare-related context. I like how the blog seems to focus on talent challenges during crisis conditions, which makes it highly practical and relevant. The idea that HRM supports resilience during operational disruption is very important, especially in sectors linked to public wellbeing. Overall, this is a thoughtful and impactful post. It could be even stronger with examples of workforce planning, retention or crisis leadership strategies

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for your thoughtful feedback. I’m glad the focus on talent challenges and HRM’s role in building resilience during disruptions stood out to you.

      I appreciate your suggestion on adding more concrete examples around workforce planning, retention, and crisis leadership. That would definitely strengthen the practical side of the discussion and make the insights even more actionable.

      Thanks again for taking the time to engage so meaningfully with the post.

      Delete

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