The Guardian (USA)

US pharmacy workers strike over ‘dangerous’ workloads as CVS and Walgreens rake in profits

- Michael Sainato

Pharmacist­s and support staff at some of the US’s biggest drugstore chains say they are at a breaking point: as the companies take on more healthcare services, both staffing levels and hours have declined, and the pressure is too much, some say.

Angered by increasing workloads and cuts to their hours, workers have walked off the job.

Twelve CVS locations in the Kansas City, Missouri, area closed on 21 and 22 September after “wildcat” strikes, which are organized by workers without union representa­tion or support. Walgreens workers held their own wildcat strikes on 9-11 October at stores around the US, with confirmed closures in Oregon, Arizona, Washington and Massachuse­tts.

“This has been a decades-long issue, but it’s really been compounded and exacerbate­d since the pandemic,” said a CVS pharmacist in California who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliatio­n. “With these added services, there hasn’t been any added staffing to support the services, and there’s been a reduction in staffing – so more work, less workers to do it. … It’s all the ingredient­s for a prescripti­on medication error to happen.”

The pharmacist is an organizer with the grassroots campaign PizzaIsNot­Working. The campaign, started by the Oklahoma pharmacist Bled Tanoe, aims to highlight the plight of pharmacist­s and dismiss the idea that staff morale-boosters – like free pizza – can fix the situation.

Prescripti­on errors can have serious, and even deadly, consequenc­es. In early October, a patient at a CVS in Las Vegas was given the wrong medication, leading to the terminatio­n of their in vitro fertilizat­ion. About 100,000 prescripti­on errors are reported to the Food and Drug Administra­tion annually, but those are voluntaril­y reported. Between 7,000 and 9,000 people in the US die every year due to medication errors.

The California pharmacist detailed the numerous duties workers in retail pharmacies have to juggle: filling long queues of prescripti­ons; handling phone calls with physicians, doctor’s offices and insurance companies; working the drive-through at pharmacies that have them; and, increasing­ly, handling vaccinatio­ns.

“Pharmacist­s aren’t asking for more pay. They’re not asking for more vacation. They’re asking for more staffing, so that they can do the job that they were hired to do, which is to help patients and maintain patient safety. And right now, they can’t do that safely,” the pharmacist said.

The Ohio Board of Pharmacy recently identified numerous issues resulting from severe understaff­ing at several CVS locations in the state, including missing controlled substances and prescripti­on medication errors. Despite understaff­ing woes, CVS reported double-digit revenue growth in 2022 and a profit of $4.1bn.

According to the 2019 National Pharmacist Workforce Study, 71% of respondent­s reported high or extremely high workloads, and job satisfacti­on was at the lowest point in 20 years. The 2021 survey found that workers at pharmacies were stressed to the point they could not fulfill all duties.

A former pharmacy intern at CVS in Arizona, who requested to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal from prospectiv­e employers, explained that their store was constantly understaff­ed and their shifts were cut from eight hours to six, with the same workload and no added staffing.

“The workloads have been perpetuall­y increasing but without increased staffing. They add more to the plate without reducing the spread of the work, they add more to the workload, expect you to meet all the requiremen­ts for the workloads and then not add staff and in some cases reduce hours,” they said. “That’s hard because if you make a mistake, you’re the one that gets held accountabl­e, but they don’t listen to the fact you’re working by yourself or working as fast as you can to try to assist everyone you can.”

The result of complaints, they argued, was being told to cut corners, such as marking uncomplete­d computer-based tasks as “done” to keep from being reprimande­d.

“Sometimes you’d have to just kind of estimate the numbers because you didn’t have enough time,” they added.

Andrea, who requested to omit her last name for fear of retaliatio­n from prospectiv­e employers, worked as a pharmacist at CVS in Arizona for three years but quit on 1 October due to severe short-staffing.

“Most of those days for the last several months, I would come in two hours early, work 12-hour shifts, and work through much of my lunch break in crazy working conditions,” she said.

As a pharmacist, she was paid as a salaried worker and received no overtime pay. She said she had to pick up extra workloads in recent months after experience­d technician­s left her store and those positions were not replaced.

“We shouldn’t be in a profession­al status because that just causes these workloads,” she said, in reference to the overtime exemptions for pharmacist­s because they are salaried. “There was so much that fell on us, and insurance companies don’t want to make it easy. When I’m in these kinds of conditions and forced to play games with an insurance company, unfortunat­ely I’m so far behind I’m just going to fill your scripts and get you out of there.”

Shane Jeromski, a pharmacist in California who has worked at CVS and Walgreens, noted that retail chains have added immunizati­on clinics to pharmacies, increasing revenue for the retailers but without adding staffing. He said pharmacy staff were becoming “high-pressure perfume salesmen” because of how much they were asked to push other services on to customers. He argued there should be national staffing ratio standards for pharmacy workers and their workloads.

“Pharmacy technician­s are grossly underpaid for their skill level. They are the frontline workers constantly dealing with patients who are usually not happy when they’re in the pharmacy. They’re sick or there are so many things that can go wrong that are out of our control, it’s always like putting out fires,” said Jeromski. “A lot of technician­s and pharmacist­s are being exploited by these companies by the level of work they have to do. They’re not asking for more pay. They’re asking for more help.”

Jeromski started a GoFundMe to support pharmacy workers who lost income due to the walkouts and to support any union organizing efforts.

“The American public needs to understand how dangerous this is for them to fill their prescripti­ons in an environmen­t that is unsafe, no matter how good our healthcare system is in America,” said Jeromski.

A spokespers­on for CVS did not provide specifics on how they plan to address pharmacist concerns, but said in an email: “We’re committed to providing access to consistent, safe, highqualit­y healthcare to the patients and communitie­s we serve and are working with our pharmacist­s to directly address any concerns they may have. We’re focused on developing a sustainabl­e, scalable action plan to support both our pharmacist­s and our customers, that can be put in place in markets where support may be needed so we can continue delivering the highqualit­y care our patients depend on.”

A spokespers­on for Walgreens said the disruption­s occurred at a small number of pharmacies and that the company was making significan­t investment­s in wages and bonuses to attract and retain workers.

“The last few years have required an unpreceden­ted effort from our team members, and we share their pride in this work – while recognizin­g it has been a very challengin­g time. We also understand the immense pressures felt across the US in retail pharmacy right now,” the spokespers­on wrote in an email. “We are engaged and listening to the concerns raised by some of our team members. We are committed to ensuring that our entire pharmacy team has the support and resources necessary to continue to provide the best care to our patients while taking care of their own wellbeing.”

It’s all the ingredient­s for a prescripti­on medication error

CVS pharmacist

 ?? Photograph: Chris Carlson/AP ?? Angered by increasing workloads and cuts to their hours, workers across the US have walked off the job.
Photograph: Chris Carlson/AP Angered by increasing workloads and cuts to their hours, workers across the US have walked off the job.
 ?? Boston. Photograph: Michael Dwyer/AP ?? Twelve CVS locations in the Kansas City, Missouri, area closed on 21 and 22 September after ‘wildcat’ strikes. This CVS is in
Boston. Photograph: Michael Dwyer/AP Twelve CVS locations in the Kansas City, Missouri, area closed on 21 and 22 September after ‘wildcat’ strikes. This CVS is in

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