Las Vegas Review-Journal

Family-run pharmacy that thrives at prescripti­on deliveries was ahead of curve

- By Hillary Davis A version of this story was posted on lasvegassu­n.com. hillary.davis@gmgvegas.com / 702-990-8949 / @Hillarylvs­un

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic made medicine delivery not just convenient but prudent, the locally owned First Class Rx Pharmacy had its niche.

In a bright and bustling headquarte­rs at Desert Inn and Sandhill roads, pharmacist­s and technician­s swiftly fill and bag orders, staple the bags shut, then place them into bins with the pace of a diner kitchen during the lunch rush.

From there, one of about half a dozen drivers — wearing red and black Nikes that coordinate with the color scheme of their company cars — takes a batch to one of the fleet cars and out to patient homes, medical offices and workplaces.

First Class Rx has delivered valleywide since opening in 2014, and business has only grown in the past year, said manager Sandra Martin. She thinks the wider preference for delivery, already used by people who can’t drive or who couldn’t easily get out of the house pre-pandemic, is here to stay as part of the new normal.

A courier like Gabriel Rivero will load deliveries in fruit crates and make 60 to 70 stops a day. Clients tend to be seniors or people with disabiliti­es and they quickly become familiar, although being on the road all day keeps things from getting stale.

“I just don’t like being stuck in the same place for eight hours,” said Rivero, who was a bartender looking for something new when a pharmacy owner who frequented his bar offered him a job five years ago.

Just as bars have regulars who get to know the staff, so do pharmacies. Some of Rivero’s customers offer him lunch or write him Christmas cards, or they’ll ask the young man, 26, for help with chores — take out the trash, replace a lightbulb — and he’s happy to oblige. Some customers prefer contactles­s delivery,

Martin’s brother Abel Cabrera started the business with 12 patients. It grew by word of mouth, and now fills prescripti­ons for 3,000 patients.

Martin said many patients are lonesome and call the pharmacy just to talk. Others request a favored driver. Customers are loyal, and at a family-run pharmacy that meets people when they’re ill or in need of help, it’s mutual.

“And we’re gonna be there, no matter what,” Martin said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS ?? Dayari Martinez, a pharmacy technician at First Class RX Pharmacy, prepares a prescripti­on for delivery Feb 24. First Class RX Pharmacy found its niche making deliveries in the Las Vegas Valley when it opened in 2014. It was ahead of the curve when the coronaviru­s brought the practice to walk-in pharmacies.
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS Dayari Martinez, a pharmacy technician at First Class RX Pharmacy, prepares a prescripti­on for delivery Feb 24. First Class RX Pharmacy found its niche making deliveries in the Las Vegas Valley when it opened in 2014. It was ahead of the curve when the coronaviru­s brought the practice to walk-in pharmacies.
 ??  ?? Gabriel Rivero, right, a delivery driver for First Class RX Pharmacy, hand delivers a prescripti­on to a patient.
Gabriel Rivero, right, a delivery driver for First Class RX Pharmacy, hand delivers a prescripti­on to a patient.
 ??  ?? Rivero returns to his vehicle after making a home delivery.
Rivero returns to his vehicle after making a home delivery.
 ??  ?? A look inside First Class RX Pharmacy.
A look inside First Class RX Pharmacy.
 ??  ?? Some of the fleet of delivery cars at First Class RX Pharmacy.
Some of the fleet of delivery cars at First Class RX Pharmacy.

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