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LSPedia 的全球序列化系列
序列化不是一刀切的。由于美国、欧盟、亚洲和中东的规定各不相同,公司必须应对复杂的要求网络。您为全球合规做好准备了吗?
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欢迎来到 LspEdia,在这里,创新与奉献精神相结合。
如果你热衷于有所作为并在协作环境中茁壮成长,LspEdia 就是你的不二之选。


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序列化不是一刀切的。由于美国、欧盟、亚洲和中东的规定各不相同,公司必须应对复杂的要求网络。您为全球合规做好准备了吗?
.avif)
如果你热衷于有所作为并在协作环境中茁壮成长,LspEdia 就是你的不二之选。


Pharmacy chains and networks face far more complex GLN requirements than independent pharmacies. With dozens—or even hundreds—of store locations, centralized functions, specialty operations, and mail-order facilities, maintaining accurate Global Location Numbers (GLNs) becomes essential for DSCSA compliance and reliable EPCIS data exchange.
Trading partners depend on precise GLN usage to determine which pharmacy location received a product, where an event occurred, and how serialized data aligns with operational reality. For large organizations, clean GLN management ensures smooth interoperability and prevents costly downstream corrections.
This guide explains how chains and networks should assign, organize, and maintain GLNs across their expanding footprint.
Every physical pharmacy location must have a unique GLN to represent its specific receiving, dispensing, and operational site. For chains, store-level GLNs form the backbone of both DSCSA traceability and day-to-day supply chain coordination.
Large pharmacy organizations typically maintain at least two types of GLNs:
Represents the corporation or owning entity.
Used in contexts where the business entity—not a physical store—is being referenced, such as:
Represent the actual pharmacy addresses where DSCSA events occur.
Used in:
Using a chain-level GLN when a store-level GLN is needed can cause:
Store-level GLNs should always be used for physical events, while corporate GLNs should be used only when identifying the legal entity.
Chains frequently operate specialty pharmacies, mail-order services, centralized fulfillment hubs, or offsite prep facilities. These locations operate differently from retail stores and therefore require their own GLNs.
These sites perform different DSCSA-relevant activities and must be uniquely identifiable in serialized events.
Centralized Functions and Functional GLNs
Large organizations often operate central units that support multiple stores. While functional GLNs are not required for all trading partners, they can be helpful when:
Functional GLNs should be clearly documented so partners understand when—and whether—they are used.
With many locations and operational units, chains must approach GLN management systematically.
A secure, master directory should include:
This becomes essential during DSCSA onboarding and EPCIS mapping.
Consistent names help internal teams and trading partners identify locations correctly.
Chains should define who is responsible for:
This prevents inconsistent practices across different departments or regions.
Large organizations should periodically validate:
Regular audits help prevent EPCIS errors before they occur.
Pharmacy chains and networks must manage GLNs at a scale that requires careful organization, consistent governance, and ongoing validation. To maintain clean DSCSA data and avoid EPCIS mismatches, chains should:
Consistent GLN management enables large pharmacy organizations to maintain accurate serialized data, prevent EPCIS rejections, and support seamless interoperability across the supply chain.