
- Pharmaceutical Commerce - July/August 2016
HDMA is now the Healthcare Distribution Alliance
Internationalization of drug wholesaling is a factor in the name change
It might strike outsiders as a subtle—and minor—change in emphasis, but there are significant drivers behind the Healthcare Distribution Management Assn.’s rebranding as HDA. The organization has had major success in two pieces of recent federal legislation: the Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA), passed in
“While simplifying our name, the new Healthcare Distribution Alliance brand also reflects our organization’s strategic role as a supply chain leader and convener in advocacy and education,” said John Gray, president and CEO. “The word ‘Alliance,’ in particular, better reflects our role as a convener of the supply chain — in the United States and now abroad — with the vision and persistence to successfully navigate these changes.”
In the past two years, HDA has organized an international meeting (Beijing in 2014, Brussels in 2015, and an upcoming London meeting in September). Beyond the simple fact that its members have international business, pharma distribution itself is beginning to have global standards and practices, such as
Gray goes on to highlight wholesaler/distributors’ growing role in patient support: “Our position at the center of the healthcare supply chain allows us to forge key partnerships for the benefit of our ultimate customer — the patient — which is reflected in our new tagline, ‘Patients Move Us.’ While distributors often do not come into direct contact with patients, we recognize that our industry and the supply chain would not exist if patients did not rely on, and benefit from, our services and expertise.”
HDA’s nonprofit research arm, the Center for Healthcare Supply Chain Research, will now be known as the HDA Research Foundation.
HDA today has about 32 distributor members (which has shrunk in recent years as consolidation continues in the US market) representing nearly all of the “full line” distributors that carry essentially all FDA-approved drugs, as well as varying quantities of medical devices and healthcare supplies. Additionally, it has associate (nonvoting) members of over 150 manufacturers, 50 service providers, and a handful of international distributors. Besides the Research Foundation, it also has a political action committee for lobbying and campaign contributions.
HDA represents a 140-year-old activity in the US: it was originally founded as the Western Wholesale Druggists’ Assn. (WWDA) on March 15, 1876, in Indianapolis. It became the National Wholesale Druggists’ Assn. in 1882 and HDMA in 2001.
On the internationalization front, there is already such an organization: the International Federal of Pharmaceutical Wholesalers (based in Manassas, VA), but aside from some recent charitable and educational work, it exists mainly for an annual gathering of members. HDA’s roughly comparable European organization is the European Healthcare Distribution Assn., known mostly by its French acronym, GIRP, and based in Brussels.
The name change was announced at HDA's annual Business and Leadership Conference (June 12-15, Colorado Springs). “The Board of Directors is proud to unveil the new HDA,” said Ted Scherr, president/CEO, Dakota Drug, Inc., and HDA Chairman. “HDA is well positioned for the future as it will continue to build on its 140-year history of collaboration and supply chain leadership.”
Articles in this issue
almost 10 years ago
Powering up medical affairsalmost 10 years ago
Enough already with REMS abuse in generic drug developmentalmost 10 years ago
3PLs set specialty pharmaceutical markets in motionalmost 10 years ago
In the track-and-trace trenchesalmost 10 years ago
Consider enterprise quality management systems for GDP tasksalmost 10 years ago
Changing of the guard at PDMA Alliancealmost 10 years ago
When it Comes to Compliance, Learning Never Stopsalmost 10 years ago
Cardiovascular therapy: More new drugs for a growing patient basealmost 10 years ago
Battle fronts in the illicit online pharmacy waralmost 10 years ago
A conversation with Terry Hisey, Deloitte



