Otago Daily Times

Risk seen to rural, suburban business

- BRUCE QUIREY bruce.quirey@odt.co.nz

SUBURBAN and rural pharmacies would not survive if everyone took their prescripti­ons to discount pharmacies, a community pharmacist and former Southern District Health Board member said.

Discount pharmacy chains were operating like supermarke­ts, lossleadin­g prescripti­ons in order to pull people into stores, Waverley Pharmacy manager Peter Barron said.

Mr Barron is a radio pharmacist on Otago Access Radio and served on the district health board for nine years.

‘‘You can’t afford to run a pharmacy as a dispensing­only pharmacy.’’

Discount pharmacies such as Chemist Warehouse and Bargain Chemist had strong buying power, which could be good for customers’ wallets.

But they did not charge patients the $5 copayment for prescripti­on medicines, effectivel­y subsidisin­g taxpayers.

‘‘They are getting volume and are entitled to do what they like,’’ he said.

‘‘But it does pose a risk to suburban and rural pharmacies.’’

An increasing emphasis on getting products into patients’ hands as cheaply as possible threatened their wellbeing, he said.

‘‘All the evidence is clear that does not equate to people taking their medication,’’ Mr Barron said.

Research showed 70% of patients did not take their medicine as prescribed, he said.

Barrowload­s of unused medication were sometimes removed from people’s homes after they died.

‘‘They don’t take their medicine because they haven’t agreed that they should have them, or something’s happening to them they weren’t expecting, or nobody has bothered to explain to them what they are supposed to be doing,’’ Mr Barron said.

He was critical of the discount chains and the SDHB, saying both were keen to have product delivered as cheaply as possible.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely the focus has

❛ Unfortunat­ely the

focus has been on quantity and price, not

on quality of service

been on quantity and price, not on quality of service.

‘‘As a healthcare system we are supposed to be in the business of delivering healthcare to people.’’

Mr Barron was sure pharmacist­s at businesses such as Bargain Chemist and Chemist Warehouse met their profession­al obligation­s, but customers would be a number, not a person, he said.

‘‘It is all a bit like a supermarke­t.

‘‘There is a commercial imperative. They have got to turn a dollar.’’

In contrast, community pharmacies developed relationsh­ips with their customers, he said.

He questioned how well pharmacist­s at discount chains were being paid in New Zealand.

The Australian­owned Chemist Warehouse paid $A28 an hour for pharmacist­s at stores across the Tasman, he said.

Payscale.com estimated the Chemist Warehouse paid from $29$39 an hour in New Zealand.

 ?? PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON ?? Health warning . . . Waverley pharmacist Peter Barron says discount pharmacies pose a risk to suburban and rural pharmacies.
PHOTO: GREGOR RICHARDSON Health warning . . . Waverley pharmacist Peter Barron says discount pharmacies pose a risk to suburban and rural pharmacies.

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