• TheFunkyMonk@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Rite Aid bought out our local pharmacy chain around Seattle (Bartell Drugs) a few years ago and it’s been a steady decline since. One of the two locations near me has closed down, and the one I go to has been more of a nightmare to deal with every time I go. I really need to get everything transferred over to CVS.

    • Synnr
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      1 year ago

      I really need to get everything transferred over to CVS.

      Maybe it’s different where you live but here I would simply need to tell my doctor “hey actually I want to use CVS now. Can you send the prescriptions to CVS at the corner of X and Y Street? Thanks”

      Then when you get to CVS you’ll need to give them your ID, phone number, signature, etc. and they’ll fill your script and that’s your new pharmacy. You can also use multiple pharmacies (I use Walgreens for one script and Kroger for the rest). If your doctor is disorganized with their notes and sends it to Rite Aid next time, just call CVS and tell them you want to get them transferred and they will call them and handle it for you.

      HOWEVER

      There is a MASSIVE strike of pharmacy workers across the country now. Mainly CVS and Walgreens but I asked my (local branded) Kroger pharmacy tech yesterday when I picked up a prescription if it’s affecting them and she said yeah they’re short staffed and she’s never seen the pharmacist so busy. So it’s likely to be affecting all pharmacies for the next few weeks as they play catch up.

      This is only a couple weeks after 75,000 Kaiser employees went on strike which makes me think it’s an industry-wide issue and we’ll see more issues in the near future. Support your local pharmacy people, if you still have one.

      Also

      Plugging GoodRx here. If you don’t have drug insurance or your drug isn’t covered, they’re a massively helpful cost-saving company. You just type in the drug name and dose and the pharmacist enters it like regular insurance. They save me a couple hundred each month.

      • Drusas@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        As someone who cannot take a generic for one specific medication, CVS has been my savior. The other pharmacies, for whatever reason, stopped stocking that particular medication a few years ago and will no longer order it. CVS stopped stocking it as well, but some of the locations will order it for you.

        On the downside, only some of the locations will order it for you. Many are so busy that they don’t answer their phones–ever (city problems). They also frequently try to refill it as a generic which is not the one that I need. So I have to go in person and not have delivery, so that I confirm I’m getting the correct medication every time.

        How are pharmacies such a mess?

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Switch over to a locally owned pharmacy if you can. The chains burn their pharmacists out.

    • Drusas@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      When they bought out Bartell’s, I commented that I assumed they would intentionally run it into the ground. That appears to have been accurate.

      Fuck Rite Aid.

      • xtr0n@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        GoodRx is realizing handy since you can use it pretty much anywhere. If you meds are available at https://costplusdrugs.com then it could be significantly cheaper there. They are mail order only and don’t take insurance but they are often an ORDER OF MAGNITUDE cheaper!!! I have a prescription that’s covered by insurance and it’s still cheaper to get it from coat plus without insurance.

        • Drusas@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Sadly, I don’t do mail order drugs anymore after having had some very bad experiences with time-sensitive medications in the past.

          • Synnr
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            1 year ago

            lol, is it methadone? I’d love methadone gummies. I only get the nasty wafers that dissolve in water really quick, or the nasty liquid.

      • Drusas@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Having thought on it some more, I strongly suspect that they bought Bartell Drugs (local to Seattle and the surrounding areas) specifically because the real estate was valuable. Close the store, sell the real estate.

    • xtr0n@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      And I’m still salty about Pharmacia getting bought out by Medley and then going under. Why can’t anyone just run a pharmacy without jumping through hoops chasing infinite growth? Pretty soon we’re all gonna be getting our meds from either Walmart or Amazon.

      • Carobu@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        What flabbergasts me is the clear conflict of interest between infinite growth and actual patient care. We really need to take this profit model out of healthcare, the only people it hurts are us. Unions in all healthcare fields are about the only thing that can combat it now without actual legislation imo.

      • Synnr
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        1 year ago

        Why can’t anyone just run a pharmacy without jumping through hoops chasing infinite growth?

        They can and they do. That would likely be any local, or privately owned pharmacies if there are still any near you. When a company goes public it becomes mandatory that they grow as much and as fast as they. They are now beholden to the board and other shareholders and if they aren’t chasing growth, they can get into big trouble.

        It’s completely their decision to go public however, and they go public knowing what they’ll have to do.

      • CmdrShepard@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        Forgive me on the (probably not totally accurate) details but I recall reading about how independent pharmacies get screwed over because insurance companies dictate what medications cost and therefore force these smaller independent pharmacies to sell their drugs at loss much of the time.

        After writing this I did google it and found an article from a couple years ago: https://whyy.org/segments/the-hidden-players-putting-independent-pharmacies-out-of-business/