One way of tackling this is to deploy your code in the correct order.
PL/SQL packages themselves are the API for the code in the package body, and the packages themselves are not dependent on each other. Package bodies however can be dependent on packages, so if a package is recompiled than it runs the risk of invalidating package bodies that reference it.
Unfortunately it's very common to see deployments that work in this order:
create or replace Package A ...;
create or replace Package Body A ...;
create or replace Package B ...;
create or replace Package Body B ...;
create or replace Package C ...;
create or replace Package Body C ...;
This has the side-effect that if code in Package Body A is dependent on Package B, then when Package B is (re)created it invalidates Package Body A.
The correct sequence for deployment is:
create or replace Package A ...;
create or replace Package B ...;
create or replace Package C ...;
create or replace Package Body A ...;
create or replace Package Body B ...;
create or replace Package Body C ...;
If there have not been changes in the package itself then there is no need to deploy it at all, of course.
Respecting these methods should give you much fewer invalid objects.