case studies

Hospital Medical Inventory Count in Preparation for Smart Cabinet

Case Studies

Contact us

  • Eliminated

    Stock-outs

  • Reduced

    Costs

  • Coverage

    National

Customer

  • Sector

    Medical Inventory Count

    NHS foundation trusts were created to devolve decision making from central government to local organizations and communities enabling them be responsive to needs and wishes of local people. A foundation trust is publicly owned and is accountable to the local population, patients, attendants and staff through a Council of Governors. The Council of Governors are appointed from stakeholder organizations such as Local Councils or elected by the members of the Trust.

    THE CHALLENGE

    The hospital foundation trust needed a solution to count all medical inventory in preparation of having smart cabinets installed in a hospital.

    The hospital foundation required RGIS to provide the following:

    • Experience within a healthcare environment
    • Produce accurate inventory records in real time
    • Identify any expired date medications
    • Support consignment inventory management
    • National coverage

    Why RGIS?

    Customers choose RGIS for hospital medical inventory counts because our trained healthcare-focused teams deliver precise, compliant counts of critical supplies and medications, ensuring reliable stock visibility, reduced waste, and uninterrupted patient care.

    RGIS White Logo

    Our Solutions

    The hospital foundation trust partnered with RGIS to complete the medical inventory count project, and provided the following:

    • All hospitals and relevant wards were contacted by the RGIS team prior to the inventory counts taking place

    • A specific time frame was put in place for each individual ward, to ensure patient needs were still met

    • The precise reporting required was discussed and agreed

    Results

    The hospital foundation trust found by outsourcing the medical inventory count project to RGIS, the following results were achieved:

    • Identified both out-of-stock and near expired drugs so that they can now be monitored more closely

    • Eliminated stock-outs

    • Reduced management costs

    • Produced accurate inventory records in real time

    • All counts were completed as required, prior to the smart cabinets being installed

    Conclusion

    By outsourcing the medical inventory count to RGIS, the hospital foundation trust gained real-time accurate records, eliminated stock-outs, reduced management costs, and identified critical expiry risks—ensuring all inventories were completed ahead of the smart cabinet installation for improved control and patient safety.

    Related Case Studies