Rx distributor turns to internal RFID

Last month, Cesar Castillo Inc. began using an RFID system that marries item identification with storage location to address inventory errors and inefficiencies.

Cesar Castillo, Inc. (CCI), San Juan, Puerto Rico, has adopted the Sybase RFID Enterprise data repository and integration platform as its inventory management system for its launch into an in-house item-level RFID program.

A wholesale distributor and third-party logistics (3PL) provider, CCI operates a mid-size consumer product distribution center that manages inventory, distribution, and logistics for pharmaceutical manufacturers. The company is committing to a program where it applies RFID tags to pharmaceuticals and reads the packaged items’ bar-coded shelf locations to electronically capture item location and quantities during receiving, stocking, and shipping. Having these items tagged also means that inventory checks will take a fraction of the time.

“Because we handle such high volumes of inventory, it is essential that we have the highest level of inventory control, while ensuring that we keep the possibility of human error to a minimum to make the most efficient use of our staff resources,” says Dr. Rafael Moreno, CCI’s business development director. “By using RFID Enterprise as the basis for our RFID system, we can reduce manual entry, increase speed, and ensure accuracy of physical inventory, allowing us to better serve our customers.”

Working in conjunction with Sybase’s RFID Anywhere product at a level below RFID Enterprise, the software will collect, filter, translate and route RFID data into a useful form for CCI. RFID is expected to improve internal traceability in CCI’s first-in, first-out process flow.

Strategic advantage

“We see RFID as a strategic advantage,” explains Moreno, who notes that many customers have expressed an interest in RFID. “First to do some internal applications and later to establish ourselves to spearhead this technology. And we will add value for our current pharmaceutical customers when they start deploying, either for internal requests to combat counterfeiting or in response to future FDA regulations. We want to ensure we are ahead of the curve in understanding RFID, getting acquainted with it, and optimizing our operations around it.”

Because of CCI’s location and positioning as a distributor to a number of local small-volume markets, it operates with customers in shipping product at a level below pallet or case level.

“Because we have less capital and less profit than our counterparts on the mainland, we have to become very smart about the ways we can make our supply chain more efficient,” Moreno says. “The way we use RFID is in a closed-loop operation. We decided to go against convention in terms of not tagging at the case or pallet level or with dock-door portals. Instead, we use it at the item level where it adds the most value for us.” He points out that that for certain pharma products, a single bottle could be more valuable than a pallet load of consumer goods.

After pallets of trayed or cased products are received, they are unpacked and tagged individually at the item level. Products tagged are most likely prescription drugs rather than over-the-counter medicine, according to Moreno. Initial items will be tablets and other solid-dose products, such as 100-count bottles of capsules, he adds.

“The selection is made considering the unit cost, security concerns, and product movement,” says Moreno.

Eventually CCI will test liquid products, he notes. “At some point, we will consider expanding RFID to all our product lines.” Those include metal (foil) blister packs, metallized pouches, and other formats that may prove challenging for RFID.

While some details remain to be finalized, many of Castillo’s plans for RFID are set. In mid-June, Moreno was finalizing specifications for tags and readers, which he expected to finish up by the end of July. Implementation is set for mid-August, 2005.

CCI will use preprogrammed, reusable 915 MHz UHF ISO 18000-6 RFID tags and readers from Intermec. The RFID tags will be affixed to individual bottles manually using elastic bands similar to those used for airline baggage tags. Sybase is considering specifying a backing or sleeve of some sort, possibly of polyurethane foam or a similar material, that will provide air-gap spacing between adjacent tagged bottles to improve readability. The tags will be applied during receiving and removed after the orders are picked for shipment just before the product leaves the warehouse. As of mid-July, CCI was planning to purchase between three to five Intermec readers.

Within CCI’s 275ꯠ-sq’ facility, the 3PL pharmaceutical portion includes 40ꯠ sq’ of storage made up of 50-ft or 100-ft long rows of 6- to 7-ft-high shelving. In total, CCI maintains 10ꯠ storage locations for its bins, a count that matches the number of RFID tags CCI will launch with. Moreno says CCI turns over its inventory every three weeks.

Why choose UHF rather than HF that seems to have solid interest in the pharma supply chain?

Moreno responds that HF requires a close distance between product and reader, “so UHF is more like a bar-code substitute. It’s easy to build an RFID solution by substituting for a bar code, but then it doesn’t add value.” It also fits in with CCI’s plans to scan an entire bin’s contents at once.

CCI’s RFID process

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