The world's largest package delivery firm is preparing to test a
U.S. service that dispatches nurses to vaccinate adults in their
homes, Reuters has learned, as the company and its healthcare
clients work to fend off cost pressures and competitive threats from
Amazon.com.
UPS did not disclose which vaccines it would be using in the
project, but drug and vaccine maker Merck & Co told Reuters it is
looking at partnering with the company for the initiative.
The project, previously unreported, shows how UPS is targeting a
larger slice of the $85 billion outsourced healthcare logistics
market. Deutsche Post's DHL Group dominates the market, which is
expected to grow to $105 billion by 2021.
"Over-the-threshold services is where the world is headed," Chris
Cassidy, who joined UPS last year from GlaxoSmithKline PLC to
oversee global healthcare logistics strategy, told Reuters in an
interview at UPS' Worldport facility in Louisville.
Here is how the test, slated to launch later this year, will
operate: Workers in UPS' 1.7 million-square-foot healthcare complex
at Worldport will package and ship the vaccine to one of the more
4,700 franchised U.S. UPS stores. A home health nurse contracted by
UPS' clinical trial logistics unit known as Marken will collect the
insulated package, transport it the "last mile" to the patient's
home and administer the vaccine, which will target a viral illness
in adults.
The aim of the test is to "see if we can connect all these dots,"
said Wes Wheeler, chief executive at Marken, which was purchased by
UPS in 2016 and is overseeing the vaccine project.
It comes as the parcel delivery industry braces for the impact of a
cooling economy and competition from customer-turned-rival Amazon,
which is building its own logistics network to contain the swelling
cost of dropping millions of packages at shoppers' homes.
UPS healthcare customers, facing political scrutiny over high drug
prices and systemic waste, are also under pressure from Amazon.
The world's biggest online retailer is teaming up with Berkshire
Hathaway and JPMorgan Chase & Co to lower prescription drug costs
for their employees. And, it rocked the sector last year with its
roughly $1 billion purchase of specialty online pharmacy PillPack.
Experts say raising low U.S. adult vaccination rates would reduce
healthcare spending by curbing preventable illnesses that result in
doctor visits and hospitalizations.
Merck, a major UPS healthcare customer, has a portfolio of vaccines
for viral illnesses ranging from shingles and hepatitis B to the
flu. Spokeswoman Pamela Eisele said the company is considering the
project as it looks for new ways to increase access to its medicines
and vaccines and boost adult vaccine rates.
Experts said the UPS project could also save money by having
contract home nurses, rather than higher paid doctors, administer
the vaccine. But the test, a first for a large U.S. shipper, is not
a guaranteed slam dunk for UPS: Marken's CEO said it must figure out
how to get medical insurers to pay for the new service.
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NEW FRONTIERS
UPS, DHL and specialty shippers have a smattering of home health
projects around the world - mostly in countries with single-payer
health systems.
DHL, the healthcare logistics leader with annual medical-related
revenue of more than 3 billion euros ($3.4 billion), transports U.K.
patients from home to non-emergency hospital appointments.
Polar Speed, a U.K. specialty logistics company UPS bought in 2014,
has trained and background-checked drivers who enter homes to drop
off prescriptions, deliver and install medical refrigerators and
infusion pumps, and remove waste such as used syringes and wound
dressings.
Pharmaceutical companies already pay Marken to give vaccines to
patients testing their experimental drugs.
Cathy Morrow Roberson, who founded consulting firm Logistics Trends
& Insights after working for more than a decade as an analyst at
Atlanta-based UPS, said the vaccine project taps the assets and
expertise the company has acquired since getting into healthcare in
the early 2000s.
"They're reaping the benefits of all the acquisitions and
investments they've made," she said.
The effort is designed to put even more distance between UPS and
Amazon, which lacks the specialized warehouse,
temperature-controlled shipping and regulatory infrastructure that
healthcare companies require. Amazon currently uses UPS and FedEx
Corp for PillPack home deliveries.
Major insurers contacted by Reuters declined to say what they pay to
have vaccines administered. But an analysis of 2010 MarketScan
health claims data sheds some light on the subject - finding that
the average cost of a shingles shot was $208.72 at a doctor's office
and $168.50 at a pharmacy. Flu shots cost less than $30 at both
locations. The provider of that data declined to update it.
Delivering home vaccines at a competitive price may not be the only
hurdle to the UPS project's success, said Stephen Buck, chief
executive of Courage Health and a former vice president at McKesson
Corp.
"Pharmacies and physicians may not be happy about a new player
competing against them," Buck said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Louisville, Ky., additional
reporting by Emma Thomasson in; Berlin and Mike Erman and Caroline
Humer in New York; Editing by Edward Tobin)
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