
Lubentis (CEO Sang-kyu Oh) , a digital hospital logistics solution company, announced that it has signed a business agreement (MOU) with LogiDyne (CEO Sumio Tanaka), a Japanese logistics consulting firm, for joint entry into the Japanese hospital logistics market.
LogiDyne, headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, has expertise in Japanese hospital logistics consulting. Rubentis has experience in building Korean hospital logistics systems and its core competencies include cloud-based logistics SaaS platform Stockflow WMS technology. Through this MOU, the two companies plan to strengthen strategic cooperation for the convergence of next-generation Korean and Japanese hospital logistics models and joint entry into the Southeast Asian market.
Through this agreement, the two companies plan to fully engage in ▲establishing an integrated hospital logistics system, ▲conducting a pilot hospital joint project, ▲entering the Southeast Asian hospital logistics market, and ▲cooperating on advanced hospital logistics technologies based on their experience and expertise in the hospital logistics sectors of both countries.
Rubentis explained, “Based on our structural understanding and implementation experience of the consistent flow (process) of prescription-billing-ordering-delivery-inspection-settlement for hospital logistics integration, we are proposing a core foundation system for logistics linkage within and outside the hospital. In order to perform hospital integrated logistics, hospital logistics standardization, integration, and automation technology based on Rubentis’ hospital logistics implementation experience are essential elements.”
In order to build an integrated process based on hospital logistics expertise, the two companies decided to expand the definition of the hospital logistics process from a simple material movement to an action-based billing system that starts at the prescription stage and jointly promote a joint system design based on the following core elements.
Rubentis CEO Sang-Kyu Oh said, “Small-scale hospitals can operate processes with manual work, but the medical supplies used by general hospitals and large hospitals are continuously increasing, so computerization, digitalization, and standardization are essential for operation.” He emphasized, “Hospital logistics is an essential field directly related to life. It can never be handled with a simple warehouse management system. A logistics system that integrates hospital-specific functions, such as behavior-based prescription aggregation, expiration date-centered inventory management, and LOT-based history tracking, is needed.”
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