Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lockdown of Nellis costs retirees

Copays off base mount quickly

- By Briana Erickson Las Vegas Review-journal

When retired Navy Chief Petty Officer Richard Gray and his wife, Sheila, were able to go to the Nellis Air Force Base pharmacy, they picked up their prescripti­ons with full coverage and no copayment.

But now their only option is off base, and the 16 medication­s they take between them cost upward of $2,000 a month out of pocket at Walgreens.

Under the base’s public health emergency called on April 3 and renewed May 4 in response to the coronaviru­s outbreak, only uniformed members and their dependents and essential civilian contract employees are allowed on base, including the pharmacy.

The Nellis pharmacy was placed off limits for retirees on April 10, leaving thousands of local military widows and retirees, many of them living on fixed incomes, locked out of the no-cost medication to which they

are entitled. Now they are subject to copays that can quickly add up to hundreds of dollars.

“It’s coldhearte­d. You’re sending all these retired veterans out to sea because we’re a threat to the base mission?” Sheila Gray said. “Why are they designatin­g this one group, who fought for their right to be there?”

Retirees do have other options: They can refill their prescripti­on via Home Delivery by calling Expressscr­ipts, which requires the doctor to submit the prescripti­on electronic­ally, or a retail pharmacy can call the Nellis Refill Pharmacy to request a transfer of prescripti­ons.

But those options come with out-of pocket costs.

$800 a month for prescripti­on

For those with few prescripti­ons, the added expense can be minimal. But for others like Richard Gray, 72, who served 22 years and was medically discharged, his asthma medication alone costs around $800 a month.

Gray, who is also a diabetic and has battled prostate cancer since 2009, said he feels like he is being treated like a “second-class citizen.”

Some retirees say they understand the seriousnes­s of the virus, but the base pharmacy is a drive-thru operation, and they don’t understand why Nellis hasn’t followed the lead of many other bases that have made adaptation­s to allow retirees to get their medication­s.

Nellis officials say they examined a variety of solutions, and “ultimately, limiting base access to uniformed members and their dependents and essential civilian and contract employees was the prudent decision to protect our retiree population, our personnel and their families, while still ensuring the success of our critical missions.”

“We understand these temporary base access restrictio­ns are frustratin­g, but they are necessary to protect our entire Nellis population while continuing to conduct our critical missions. Satellite pharmacy services will be available on weekends in Phase IV of our phased reopening plan, details for which are expected to be released in the coming weeks,” officials said in a statement.

Retired Air Force Senior Master Sgt.

David Pacheco said he understood that it would take “a couple weeks to formulate a plan and get organized” but didn’t expect the closure to last this long.

“I went to Vietnam four times,” he said. “I spent a whole year in Korea. I missed numerous occasions, birthdays, school events, Christmas, to earn the benefit that I was promised. And now for it to be taken away, I don’t think it’s fair.”

The closure of the base came after officials announced on March 19 that a service member from NATO who was at the base tested positive for COVID-19.

At least 51 COVID-19 cases on base

It was the first confirmed case at Nellis, and the man, who visited the base for Red Flag exercises, entered isolation when symptoms arose, officials said at the time.

Nellis officials have declined to report the total number of COVID-19 cases on base. But in an email obtained by the Review-journal and dated April 23, Col. Cavan Craddock, commander of the 99th Air Base Wing, told personnel that 1,083 tests had been administer­ed at the Nellis hospital and that 51 came back

I went to Vietnam four times. I spent a whole year in Korea. I missed numerous occasions, birthdays, school events, Christmas, to earn the benefit that I was promised. And now for it to be taken away, I don’t think it’s fair. positive.

The base is in Phase Two of its reopening plan and will only move into each new phase after specific criteria — including no significan­t change in positive COVID-19 cases, robust testing capability, hospital surge capacity and extensive tracing measures — have been met and sustained for at least two to three weeks.

Phase Three will entail the return of all base personnel, but telework will be permitted where applicable, officials said.

Phase Four will see the eliminatio­n of the public health emergency and the reinstatem­ent of base access for all eligible patrons, including retirees, on weekends only. Face masks and social distancing will remain in place and be required at the exchange, commissary and satellite pharmacy.

Phase Five will include full access to the base for all eligible persons. Social distancing requiremen­ts will be reduced until they are no longer necessary.

Retired Navy Lt. Cmdr. Kenneth Knudson, 82, said his 18 medication­s are up for a refill June 1, and he was surprised to learn when he was turned away that the base was closed to retirees.

“It kind of amazed me; I almost couldn’t believe it,” he said, adding that the base was a big factor in his decision to move to Las Vegas. “We do need this to go back. We need some answers. Our country’s turned their back on us right now.”

Contact Briana Erickson at berickson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-387-5244. Follow @Bybrianae on Twitter.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Military retirees Kenneth Knudsen, left, and Rich and Sheila Gray are no longer allowed to use the Nellis Air Force Base pharmacy while it is under a health emergency because of the pandemic. Below are medication­s for the Grays that regularly need to be refilled.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Military retirees Kenneth Knudsen, left, and Rich and Sheila Gray are no longer allowed to use the Nellis Air Force Base pharmacy while it is under a health emergency because of the pandemic. Below are medication­s for the Grays that regularly need to be refilled.

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