Free Drug Donation
Pharmacy Opens in California
Allison
Gilchrist, Associate Editor | Published Online: Wednesday, February 24,
2016
California’s
first surplus prescription medication program recently opened its doors.
Better
Health Pharmacy is dedicated to collecting and dispensing unused, unopened, and
unexpired medications from state-regulated facilities to patients for
free.
Up until
now, these drug donation services have been housed in the Santa Clara Public
Health Department Pharmacy. The program has dispensed more than 8700
prescriptions and generated a savings of more than $400,000 since the
initiative began in 2015.
From the
program’s new home in San Jose, California, patients
in need will be able to obtain their prescriptions at no cost and without
co-pays.
Drug
donation pharmacies are a practical response to the increasing need for free or
low-cost medications. Nearly 23% of US adults report missing or skipping
prescriptions altogether solely because of cost.
In a
press release, Pharmacist-in-Charge Khanh Pham, PharmD, said the new space will allow Better Health
Pharmacy to “dispense a wider variety of medications, [and] we hope [it] will
help us serve more county residents at this pharmacy.”
While
most medication types are eligible for distribution, California laws prevent
the nonprofit pharmacy from dispensing certain controlled substances, including
pain and anxiety medications like acetaminophen/hydrocodone (Vicodin),
oxycodone (Oxycontin), and acetaminophen/oxycodone (Percocet).
Better
Health Pharmacy and other charitable drug initiatives are improving access to
essential medications for low-income, uninsured patients in the United
States.
One such
organization called the Dispensary of Hope has collected more than $150 million
in medications from both manufacturers and health systems since its founding in
2003.
Dispensary
of Hope CEO Christopher Palombo, MA, MSHM, FACHE, told Pharmacy Times that
participating manufacturers and health systems are motivated to donate by moral
imperatives and economic incentives.
“The
reality we explain to manufacturers [and other donors] is it’s weird to destroy
something while there are uninsured people who otherwise wouldn’t have the
medications they need,” he said. Palombo asserted that there is
“absolutely no opportunity cost” to donating the drugs.
The potential impact of charitable drug distribution is substantial. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 30 million individuals will remain uninsured after the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented, and internal calculations from the Dispensary of Hope suggest that there are billions of dollars in surplus medicines each year.
The potential impact of charitable drug distribution is substantial. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that 30 million individuals will remain uninsured after the Affordable Care Act is fully implemented, and internal calculations from the Dispensary of Hope suggest that there are billions of dollars in surplus medicines each year.
SOURCE: PHARMACY TIMES