The Boston Globe

Ohio fines CVS $1.5m over safety, staffing issues

- By Johnny Diaz NEW YORK TIMES

CVS Health, the nation’s largest pharmacy chain with more than 9,000 locations, has been fined more than $1.5 million by Ohio regulators over problems connected to understaff­ing and patient safety, officials said.

The fines are part of a settlement of 27 cases involving various safety concerns that were uncovered during a series of inspection­s of 22 pharmacies between 2020 and 2023, the State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy said in a statement Thursday.

The board said it found, among other things, improper drug security, errors dispensing drugs, prescripti­on delays, lack of general cleanlines­s, understaff­ing, and failure to report losses of controlled substances.

The settlement comes as pharmacies nationwide have been plagued by labor issues. In November, some pharmacy workers called in sick or walked off the job to call attention to what they say is inadequate staffing and growing work demands.

The Ohio board levied a $1.25 million penalty against CVS. Over the next three years, the company will also pay approximat­ely $250,000 to cover the costs “of enhanced monitoring” by the board.

In addition, eight stores will be placed on probation for three years, the board said.

In a store in Toledo, Ohio, inspectors last year found drug shelves were dusty and cluttered and that pharmacy counters were dirty, according to state records. At the same outlet, inspectors reported finding unlabeled amber vials containing medication.

At that store, the report also cited, among other things, a complaint about an error about a brand versus generic prescripti­on being dispensed and a complaint about medication being given to the wrong patient.

CVS will appoint an Ohio compliance liaison, who will be a licensed Ohio pharmacist, to communicat­e between the company and the board about compliance with state and federal pharmacy regulation­s.

“By entering into this settlement agreement, the board seeks immediate and systemic changes to protect patients and address critical understaff­ing,” Steven W. Schierholt, director of the Ohio Board of Pharmacy, said in the statement.

“We believe that this agreement is an acknowledg­ment by CVS that considerab­le changes are warranted to ensure the safe practice of pharmacy at their retail stores,” he added.

CVS Health has about 350 locations in Ohio and more than 9,000 retail locations nationwide, according to the board and the company.

In 2020, CVS Health was fined $125,000 by state regulators in Oklahoma for conditions found at four of its pharmacies, including inadequate staffing and errors made in filling prescripti­ons.

In a statement on Sunday, a CVS Health spokespers­on, Amy Thibault, said the company was “pleased to have reached an agreement with the Ohio Board of Pharmacy regarding yearsold allegation­s involving some of our Ohio pharmacies.”

She added, “We look forward to working with the board on these matters moving forward, including enhancing our positive identifica­tion systems, and continuing to provide safe, high-quality pharmacy care to our patients.”

In addition to the settlement, the pharmacy board said that it recently filed a set of rules with the State Joint Committee on Agency Rule Review to strengthen regulation­s on working conditions in pharmacies.

The rules, most of which CVS has voluntaril­y agreed to comply with, include requiremen­ts for pharmacies to develop a process to address staffing concerns and provide mandatory rest breaks for pharmacy staff members.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States