The Columbus Dispatch

Equitas planning a new pharmacy

Ready to convert vacant Short North building

- Erica Thompson

Equitas Health plans to convert a vacant building in the Short North into a pharmacy that will potentiall­y open next summer.

Last December, the LGBTQ health provider purchased the single-story, 1,800-square-foot property at 1015 N. High St. for about $3 million, according to Franklin County Auditor records.

The new pharmacy will be next to Equitas’ Short North medical center at 1033 N. High St.

Having a separate facility will allow Equitas to serve more patients, said Nick Saltsman, the company’s interim chief pharmacy officer.

“We really want to try to take care of any patients who need our pharmacy services, whether they use the medical center or not,” Saltsman said.

“The Short North location is our oldest location, but there’s still a lot of people in that area who don’t realize we have an open-door community pharmacy. So, we’re thinking by moving it out into that location, it’s really going to open it up to a lot of other people.”

One of Columbus’ largest nonprofits, Equitas has about 500 employees, and serves patients with HIV/AIDS at facilities in Ohio and Texas. The organizati­on also offers primary care, dentistry, mental health services and more.

Its pharmacies in Cincinnati, Dayton and King-lincoln/bronzevill­e are connected to its medical centers. In addition to being the organizati­on’s first free-standing pharmacy in Ohio, the new Short North operation will be the first to provide a drive-thru.

The Victorian Village Commission reviewed Equitas’ proposal for renovation­s to the Short North building, which formerly housed a checkcashi­ng business, at its July 13 meeting.

Equitas suggested updating the building with a flat roof, brick facades, stucco reveals and wall-mounted lighting, among other changes.

The commission provided some feedback on logo design and landscapin­g, but was “impressed” overall, according to Saltsman.

He said Equitas hopes to have approval by September.

Although the health provider’s pharmacies are open to all, they are intentiona­l about being inclusive to the LGBTQ community by using preferred “We have more people available to help patients out so they understand their medication­s. Our goal is that no one leaves our pharmacy without their meds because they can’t afford them.”

Nick Saltsman

Equitas Health’s interim chief pharmacy officer

forcing us to rethink this approach. While we are experienci­ng many of the same headwinds as other organizati­ons – including shifts in the industry landscape, evolving customer expectatio­ns, and challengin­g market conditions – we also must reconcile missteps we made.

“Our fast-paced growth and lack of focus strained our product and engineerin­g resources and prevented us from executing quickly on key initiative­s. I take responsibi­lity for this.”

He said the company will narrow its services in an effort to become more profitable.

“We will focus on doing one thing, doing it incredibly well, and measuring what matters,” Lane added.

“Going forward, that one thing is the critical connection between providers and payers, starting with Autonomous Revenue Cycle for providers and Utilizatio­n Management Transforma­tion for payers,” which Lane said accounted for 80% of the company’s revenue.

An Olive spokespers­on said the layoffs will not impact the long-term goals for a Worthingto­n office but may impact the timetable.

“We are moving forward with our commitment to our new HQ in Worthingto­n,”

the spokespers­on said. “This is a long-term investment that will support our vision and strategy. However, our planned investment­s for immediate improvemen­ts to this property will be scaled back.”

Olive joins several Columbus-area companies to announce layoffs this year, including Root Insurance, Ohiohealth and Victoria’s Secret. jweiker@dispatch.com @Jimweiker

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States