Nearly 30% of US drugstores closed in one decade, study shows
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[December 04, 2024]
By TOM MURPHY
Nearly three out of 10 U.S. drugstores that were open during the
previous decade had closed by 2021, new research shows.
Black and Latino neighborhoods were most vulnerable to the retail
pharmacy closures, which can chip away at already-limited care options
in those communities, researchers said in a study published Tuesday in
Health Affairs.
The trend has potentially gained momentum since the study's timeframe,
because many drugstores are still struggling. In the last three years,
the major chains Walgreens and CVS have closed hundreds of additional
stores, and Rite Aid shrank as it went through a bankruptcy
reorganization.
Drugstores have been dealing with shrinking reimbursement for
prescriptions, rising costs and changing customer shopping habits. The
chains have been closing money-losing stores and transferring
prescription files to more profitable locations.
The study found that more than 29% of the nearly 89,000 retail U.S.
pharmacies that operated between 2010 and 2020 had closed by 2021. That
amounts to more than 26,000 stores.
Researchers using data from the National Council for Prescription Drug
Programs found that the number of U.S. pharmacies had actually increased
from 2010 to 2017 because of store openings, but the pace of closings
picked up starting in 2018.
They also highlighted which stores were more likely to close. Those
include independent pharmacies, which were more likely than chain stores
to be in Black, Latino and low-income neighborhoods.
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The CVS Pharmacy logo is displayed on a store on Aug. 3, 2021, in
Woburn, Mass. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)
 Pharmacies in neighborhoods with
higher rates of patients on government-funded Medicaid and Medicare
also were at greater risk for closing, said Dima Qato, a University
of Southern California pharmacy professor who was the study's lead
author. Those programs tend to reimburse less than private health
insurance.
Researchers also noted that the exclusion of some pharmacies,
particularly independent drugstores, from pharmacy benefit manager
networks can hurt. That can mean fewer prescriptions and customers
visit for those stores.
Retail drugstores can be important sources for vaccinations,
contraception, overdose prevention and opioid use disorder
treatments, aside from prescriptions, Qato said. She noted that
Black and Latino communities often have fewer pharmacies to begin
with, so store closings hit residents of those communities
particularly hard.
“There aren’t many other options for them,” she said.
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