Abstract:
Background - Performance improvement has become top supply chain goals that can be achieved
by supply chain collaboration, supply chain integration and information sharing. However, there
is scarcity of empirical evidence in examining the extent to which those strategies comprehensively
influence the supply chain performance of health facilities in Ethiopian public supply chain.
Objective - To determine the impact of supplier-health facility collaboration on healthcare supply
chain performance with mediating role of health institution supplier integration, moderating role
of information sharing and associated challenges in western Ethiopia, 2025.
Method - A concurrent mixed method study conducted from November 2024 & February 2025. A
cross-sectional design was applied for quantitative study while the qualitative method used a
phenomenological design. Total of 277 participants from health facilities in the Western Ethiopia
were selected by using multistage sampling technique. Quantitative data were collected by self
administering pretested and expert-reviewed questionnaires. Descriptive statistics was used to
summarize socio-demographic variables & relationships among the constructs tested by using a
structural equation modeling at 5% level of significance. The measurement model was validated
through exploratory factor analysis in SPSS-27 & confirmatory factor analysis in AMOS-26. The
results were presented by texts, tables, graph & figures. For the qualitative phase, 12 purposively
selected key informants participated in face-to-face interviews & data were analyzed thematically.
Result - Among 277 questionnaires, 271 were completed and returned making the response rate
97.8%. Supply chain collaboration, information sharing and health institutions supplier integration
all showed positive and significant relationship with the supply chain performance of health
facilities, with β values of 0.41, 0.55 and 0.33 respectively at p < 0.001. Health institution-supplier
integration also mediated the link between supply chain collaboration and performance with
β=0.292 at p value of 0.014. In contrast, information sharing failed to moderate the effect of supply
chain collaboration on the supply chain performance (β=0.035 at p value of 0.264) that may be
due to intentional over reporting from health facilities in some occasions. Deliberate demand
overstatement, work overload, infrastructure, human resource limitations and unilateral decisions
are challenges associated to supply chain collaboration, integration and information sharing.
Conclusion - The study revealed that information sharing between health facilities and suppliers
is the most critical driver of the supply chain performance. Furthermore, strengthening supply
chain collaboration and embedding it with robust health institution supplier integration can further
enhance significantly the overall performance of health facilities supply chain.