The Denver Post

Drugstores forced to limit hours due to staff shortages

- By Tom Murphy

A rush of vaccine-seeking customers and staff shortages are squeezing drugstores around the U.S., leading to frazzled workers and temporary pharmacy closures.

Drugstores are normally busy this time of year with flu shots and other vaccines, but now pharmacist­s are doling out a growing number of COVID-19 shots and giving coronaviru­s tests.

The push for shots is expected to grow more intense as President Joe Biden urges vaccinated Americans to get booster shots to combat the emerging omicron variant.

The White House said Thursday that more than two in three COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns are happening at local pharmacies.

And pharmacist­s worry another job might soon be added to their to-do list: If regulators approve antiviral pills from drugmakers Merck and Pfizer to treat COVID-19, pharmacist­s may be able to diagnose infections and prescribe pills to customers.

“There’s crazy increased demand on pharmacies right now,” said Theresa Tolle, an independen­t pharmacist who has seen COVID-19 vaccine demand quadruple since the summer at her Sebastian, Fla., store.

Pharmacist­s say demand for COVID-19 vaccines started picking up during the summer as the delta variant spread rapidly.

Booster shots and the expansion of vaccine eligibilit­y to include children have since stoked it.

On top of that workload and routine prescripti­ons, many drugstores also have been asking pharmacist­s to counsel patients more generally on their health or about chronic conditions such as diabetes and high blood pressure.

Pharmacies also have been handling more phone calls from customers with questions about vaccines or COVID-19 tests, noted Justin Wilson, who owns three independen­t pharmacies in Oklahoma.

“We’re all working a lot harder than we did before, but we’re doing everything we can to take care of people,” Wilson said, adding that he has not had to close any of his pharmacies temporaril­y or limit hours so far.

Tolle said she was lucky to hire a pharmacy resident just before the delta surge arrived. The new employee was supposed to focus mostly on diabetes programs but largely has been relegated to vaccine duty.

Tolle said her Bay Street Pharmacy is now giving about 80 COVID-19 vaccines a day, up from 20 before the delta wave.

“God’s timing worked out well for me,” she said. “We would not have gotten through without having that additional person here.”

Others haven’t been as fortunate. A CVS Health store on the northeast side of Indianapol­is shuttered its pharmacy in the middle of the afternoon Thursday because of staffing issues. A sign taped to the metal gate over the closed pharmacy counter also told customers that the pharmacy soon will start closing for a half hour each afternoon so the pharmacist can have a lunch break.

Such temporary closures have ebbed and flowed in pockets around the country throughout the pandemic, but they have grown more acute in recent months, said Anne Burns, a vice president with the American Pharmacist­s Associatio­n.

Pharmacies all need minimum staffing to operate safely, and they sometimes have to close temporaril­y if they fall below those levels.

Burns said many pharmacies already had relatively thin staffing levels heading into the pandemic, and a wave of pharmacist­s and pharmacy technician­s left after the virus hit.

“There is a lot of stress and burnout for individual­s who have been going at this since March of 2020,” she said.

CVS Health spokesman T.J. Crawford said he couldn’t comment on the circumstan­ces for one store. But he said his company continues “to manage through a workforce shortage that isn’t unique to CVS Health.”

Rival drugstore chain Walgreens also has adjusted pharmacy hours “in a limited number of stores,” spokesman Fraser Engerman

said.

Both companies are hiring.

CVS Health says it has hired 23,000 employees from a push it started in September. About half of that total was pharmacy technician­s, who can deliver vaccines.

As companies scramble to hire or keep workers, Burns and Tolle worry about adding even more responsibi­lities such as diagnosing and treating COVID-19.

Tolle noted that it is not clear yet how pharmacist­s will be reimbursed for the time they take to diagnose and prescribe.

That will have to be clarified, especially if cases surge again and drugstores need to add even more workers to help.

“We want to be able to help our communitie­s,” she said. “I don’t know how pharmacies are going to manage it.”

Sherri Brown, a city employee in Omaha, was searching for a vaccine booster dose.

But two nearby pharmacies didn’t have appointmen­ts available, and a third didn’t have the brand she wanted.

She wound up getting a shot at a county-run clinic Friday.

“I just wanted to protect myself,” said Brown, who suffered through two weeks of coughing, headaches and fatigue when she caught the virus in January, before she was vaccinated.

“I guess I’m encouraged to see that people are taking this more seriously.”

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