A comparative analysis of national medical stockpile strategies: Lessons Learned from COVID-19 Pandemic Response

Azai, Jude Shagan and Laryea, Jehu Emefa Nii-Laryea (2025) A comparative analysis of national medical stockpile strategies: Lessons Learned from COVID-19 Pandemic Response. World Journal of Advanced Research and Reviews, 27 (1). pp. 1966-1972. ISSN 2581-9615

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic exposed critical vulnerabilities in national medical stockpile strategies worldwide, highlighting the need for resilient, adaptive, and efficient preparedness frameworks. This review paper presents a comparative analysis of national medical stockpile approaches in Australia, the United States, and selected European countries (France, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, and Norway), focusing on lessons learned from their COVID-19 pandemic responses. Through a qualitative synthesis of government reports, peer-reviewed literature, and policy analyses published between 2018 and 2025, the study examines governance structures, stockpile composition, deployment mechanisms, and operational challenges. Key findings reveal that Australia’s federal-state coordination model enhanced distribution agility, while the U.S. Strategic National Stockpile faced supply chain fragility and coordination challenges. European nations demonstrated innovative practices such as stock rotation through partnerships with private wholesalers and integration of hospital-level stockpiles to reduce waste and improve local responsiveness. The pandemic highlighted the imperative for diversified supply chains, domestic manufacturing capacity, and real-time inventory management systems to ensure stockpile sustainability and equitable deployment. Recommendations include establishing clear legal mandates, securing stable funding, adopting hybrid stockpiling models combining physical reserves with surge capacity contracts, and fostering international collaboration for shared learning and joint procurement. By integrating these lessons, national stockpiles can better support rapid, equitable, and sustained responses to future health emergencies, thereby strengthening global health security. This review contributes actionable insights for policymakers, public health officials, and emergency planners committed to enhancing pandemic preparedness and response capabilities.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: https://doi.org/10.30574/wjarr.2025.27.1.2685
Uncontrolled Keywords: National medical stockpile; COVID-19 pandemic; Supply chain resilience; Stockpile governance; Pandemic preparedness
Date Deposited: 01 Sep 2025 13:55
Related URLs:
URI: https://eprint.scholarsrepository.com/id/eprint/5124