LGPMI

Laboratoire Génie de Production et Maintenance Industrielle

A Performance Comparison of Manual Dispensing and Automated Drug Delivery


Journal article


Dhiyaeddine Metahri, Khalid Hachemi
International Journal of Applied Research on Public Health Management (IJARPHM), vol. 5, IGI Global, 2020, pp. 1--13


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APA   Click to copy
Metahri, D., & Hachemi, K. (2020). A Performance Comparison of Manual Dispensing and Automated Drug Delivery. International Journal of Applied Research on Public Health Management (IJARPHM), 5, 1–13. https://doi.org/10.4018/IJARPHM.2020010101


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Metahri, Dhiyaeddine, and Khalid Hachemi. “A Performance Comparison of Manual Dispensing and Automated Drug Delivery.” International Journal of Applied Research on Public Health Management (IJARPHM) 5 (2020): 1–13.


MLA   Click to copy
Metahri, Dhiyaeddine, and Khalid Hachemi. “A Performance Comparison of Manual Dispensing and Automated Drug Delivery.” International Journal of Applied Research on Public Health Management (IJARPHM), vol. 5, IGI Global, 2020, pp. 1–13, doi:10.4018/IJARPHM.2020010101.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{metahri2020a,
  title = {A Performance Comparison of Manual Dispensing and Automated Drug Delivery},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {International Journal of Applied Research on Public Health Management (IJARPHM)},
  pages = {1--13},
  publisher = {IGI Global},
  volume = {5},
  doi = {10.4018/IJARPHM.2020010101},
  author = {Metahri, Dhiyaeddine and Hachemi, Khalid}
}

Abstract

Recently, the automatic distribution in pharmacies has solved the problems associated with traditional drug distribution, such as, quality of service to the customers, slow operation speed, inventory management, and savings in labour costs. The main contribution of this article is to present and to highlight the benefits of using a free-fall flow-rack automated storage and retrieval system for automating drug distribution in the pharmacies. For this, a comparison study has been carried out between the automatic and manual drug distribution according to the total delivery time of customer request. The total delivery time of customer request for the automatic distribution was calculated via simulation, while manual distribution was evaluated by an empirical study. 10 scenarios for each customer request have been performed to emulate the real distribution in pharmacies. We found that the deviation between the manual and automatic distribution can reach 94%.