Houston Chronicle

Industry is jolted by Amazon Pharmacy

- By Jay Greene

SEATTLE — Amazon elbowed its way into online prescripti­on drug sales Tuesday, sending shares of giant drugstore chains plummeting over fears of new competitio­n.

The e-commerce giant debuted the new Amazon Pharmacy a littlemore than two years after it acquired online pharmacy PillPack for $753 million, a deal that presaged the company’s entrance into the business.

Thestore is available toall customers, though Amazon Prime members, who generally pay $119 a year in the United States, get two-day delivery with no added charge.

Though long expected, the announceme­nt rattled the drugstore industry, sinking the shares of all of Amazon’s news rivals. Shares in both CVS and Walgreens Boots Alliance slid nearly 9 percent in midday trading. Rite Aid’s stock fell more than 15 percent.

Prescripti­on drug sales will approach $360 billion this year, says a forecast from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, an agency within the Department of Health and Human Services. With the ongoing pandemic, Amazon Pharmacy hopes to take advantage of the burgeoning interest in shopping from home.

“As more and more people look to complete everyday errands from home, pharmacy is an important and needed addition to the Amazon online store,” senior vice president Doug Herrington said in a statement announcing themove.

Amazon Pharmacy is available, for now, to customers in every state except Hawaii, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, and Minnesota, thoughthec­ompany is planning to add those states in the coming year.

Amazon offers a variety of pharmacy services in other countries, where regulation­s vary, though those businesses are separate from the U.S. prescripti­ondrug business.

As with other pharmacies, Amazon’s service will require prescripti­ons from licensed health care providers.

The company said it will securely manage customer informatio­n in compliance with the Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lityAct, orHIPAA. Andit said it will not share informatio­n that is protected by law outsideof itspharmac­y for marketing purposes “without clear permission from the customer.”

Amazon also said it will not sell so-called Schedule II controlled medication­s, which includemos­t opioids. And Amazon will offer phone access to customer care at any time to answer questions about medication­s.

Prime members will be eligible for prescripti­on discounts at more than 50,000 pharmacies nationwide, including CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, as well as longtime rivals Walmart and Costco. That offering is administer­ed by Inside Rx, which provides access to medication for self-paying consumers.

For Amazon, online prescripti­on drug sales are a way to provide another benefit for Prime members, its most lucrative retail customers. The company has said it has more than 150 million Prime memberswor­ldwide.

“Amazon Pharmacy offers yet another path to decrease churn while, at the same time, increase engagement among Prime members, ultimately resulting in further revenue upside over the next few years,” UBS analyst Eric Sheridan said in a note to clients.

Amazon Pharmacy builds off PillPack’s mail-order prescripti­on-drug business, which already had developed much of the needed infrastruc­ture, from negotiatin­g with payers and benefit managers to procuring medication­s.

PillPack’s business of helping customers manage multiple daily medication­s for chronic conditions will continue as a distinct service, the company said.

 ?? Staff file photo ?? An Amazon delivery van makes a stop in the Clear Lake-area neighborho­od of Bay Glen. Amazon Pharmacy’s debut has depressed its rivals.
Staff file photo An Amazon delivery van makes a stop in the Clear Lake-area neighborho­od of Bay Glen. Amazon Pharmacy’s debut has depressed its rivals.

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