Media Coverage

Media articles featuring INFORMS members in the news.

Most Recent Media Coverage

Topic
Watch: Curing the Healthcare Supply Chain

Watch: Curing the Healthcare Supply Chain

Supply Chain Brain, June 12, 2020

Christopher Tang, professor at UCLA's Anderson School of Management, describes what it will take for hospital and healthcare supply chains to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 was a “wakeup call” for supply chains, Tang says. A nation that ostensibly has an abundance of materials discovered that it could be subject to serious shortages of critical supplies needed to fight a pandemic, such as personal protective equipment and ventilators. “We need to rethink how we can do better,” he says.

Against the Unknown, Georgia Hospitals Gird for the Next Virus Wave

Against the Unknown, Georgia Hospitals Gird for the Next Virus Wave

AJC, June 12, 2020

When the hardest hit area of the state confronted the worst of the pandemic, its biggest hospital got into the daycare business. Doctors, nurses and other front line workers at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany were marooned at home because the shutdown of schools and day cares left no one to care for their children. The hospital responded by assigning employees to convert a health center into a kids camp. Administrative workers became camp counselors.

Lockdowns May Have Averted 60 Million Coronavirus Infections in U.S. Alone

Lockdowns May Have Averted 60 Million Coronavirus Infections in U.S. Alone

Scene, June 12, 2020

Lockdowns implemented in some countries to reduce transmission of the coronavirus were extremely effective at controlling its rapid spread and saved millions of lives, two new studies suggest. Shutdowns prevented or delayed an estimated 531 million coronavirus infections across six countries — China, South Korea, Iran, Italy, France and the United States — researchers from the University of California, Berkeley report June 8 in Nature.

Now You'll Have to Pass a Health Screening to Fly United Airlines

Now You'll Have to Pass a Health Screening to Fly United Airlines

Crain's Chicago Business, June 10, 2020

United Airlines says it’s requiring passengers to answer questions about their health before they fly.The Chicago-based carrier says it’s the first U.S. airline to require flyers to answer the questions, which are a common screening tool in hospitals and other settings. United already is requiring passengers to wear masks onboard aircraft to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

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Artificial Intelligence

AI Hallucinations? Two Brains Are Better Than One

AI Hallucinations? Two Brains Are Better Than One

Computer World, December 28, 2024

A number of startups and cloud service providers are starting to offer tools for monitoring, evaluating, and correcting problems with generative AI in the hope of eliminating errors, hallucinations, and other systemic problems associated with this technology.

Will AI Reboot Supply Chains?

Will AI Reboot Supply Chains?

Global Finance Magazine, December 9, 2024

Catastrophic weather events, wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, trade conflicts, global pandemics—the forces disrupting supply chains are multiplying at a rate few could have anticipated.

Healthcare

Supply Chain

Why Santa Claus Does Best When he Overestimates Demand

Why Santa Claus Does Best When he Overestimates Demand

Parcel Magazine, December 18, 2024

During the holiday season, a late delivery can sometimes feel like the end of the world. You’ve been there: you order a highly anticipated gadget, new clothes, or a last-minute gift, only to find out that your delivery is delayed. While many blame shipping companies or delivery drivers, the true culprit often lies deeper in the supply chain — at the heart of it all: forecasting.

Climate