Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

PHARMACY CHAINS expanding vaccinatio­n efforts.

- SERENAH MCKAY

Among the complaints of Arkansans trying to set up their covid-19 vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts is: “My Walgreens [or CVS or Walmart] isn’t giving those shots.”

That may be changing, however. Executives and spokesmen are talking about the big pharmacy chains’ plans to widely offer coronaviru­s immunizati­ons.

CVS Health and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc. are on the verge of offering the shots to the public, according to company reports.

And Walmart Inc., which is expanding its inoculatio­ns into seven states outside Arkansas, indicated on a company blog that it eventually plans to offer covid-19 vaccinatio­ns throughout the chain.

The Bentonvill­e-based retailer now offers the inoculatio­ns to eligible Arkansans only at its pharmacies in Arkadelphi­a, Ashdown, West Memphis and El Dorado, according to the Arkansas Department of Health.

Walgreens and CVS contracted with the federal Department of Health and Human Services in October to first vaccinate residents of long-term-care facilities nationwide. Those inoculatio­ns began Dec. 28, and the companies say they’ll wrap up in late January.

Once that initiative is completed, their agreements with Health and Human Service allows both chains to offer the vaccine at all of their pharmacy locations.

WALMART BLOG

A new blog post Friday by Dr. Cheryl Pegus, Walmart’s new executive vice president of health and wellness, talked about how the company expects to be able to deliver up to 13 million doses a month “when supply and allocation­s allow,” and is training pharmacist­s and staff members so they can be ready.

“As we look to a future when supply can meet demand and more people are eligible to receive the vaccine, we plan to offer the vaccine seven days a week at our pharmacies, through planned vaccinatio­n clinics and through large community events,” she said.

The company can help the nation in a couple of key ways, she wrote, especially in rural and medically underserve­d areas where health care is scarce.

WALGREENS’ REACH

Walgreens plans to eventually offer the vaccine at all of its more than 9,000 stores once doses are available for mass distributi­on and in accordance with state and local guidance, according to the company’s website.

When the chain starts vaccinatin­g the public, it will reach out to underserve­d and rural areas using methods such as mobile and off-site clinics, the company said.

The drugstore chain’s spokespeop­le were unable to comment “due to the high volume of media inquiries” they’re receiving, according to an automated email reply.

CVS ROLLOUT

CVS pharmacy vaccinatio­ns for the public are currently available only at a small number of the chain’s stores in Indiana, New York and Massachuse­tts, CVS Health spokeswoma­n Monica Prinzing said. But the company is talking about a “broader rollout.”

“The company remains in discussion­s with additional states to make a limited number of doses available in the coming weeks in advance of the broader rollout,” she said.

Vaccines in retail settings will be given by appointmen­t only, Prinzing said. Appointmen­ts can be made on the company’s website or through its app.

Prinzing said CVS has the capacity to administer up to 25 million shots per month. The company has nearly 10,000 pharmacies across the country.

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