This post was originally published on this site
The small-town drugstore closed for the last time on a clear and chilly afternoon in February. Jon Jacobs, who owned Yough Valley Pharmacy, hugged his employees goodbye. He cleared the shelves and packed pill bottles into plastic bins.
Mr. Jacobs, a 70-year-old pharmacist, had spent more than half his life building his drugstore into a bedrock of Confluence, Pa., a rural community of roughly 1,000 people. Now the town was losing its only health care provider.
Obscure but powerful health care middlemen — companies known as pharmacy benefit managers, or P.B.M.s — had destroyed his business.
This has been happening all over the country, a New York Times investigation found. P.B.M.s, which employers and government programs hire to oversee prescription drug benefits, have been systematically underpaying small pharmacies, helping to drive hundreds out of business.
The pattern is benefiting the largest P.B.M.s, whose parent companies run their own competing pharmacies. When local drugstores fold, the benefit managers often scoop up their customers, according to dozens of patients and pharmacists.
Newly Created Deserts
Nearly 800 ZIP codes that had at least one pharmacy in 2015 now have none.
Pharmacy deserts
Newly created
– Lost all pharmacies since 2015
Darrington, Wash.
– No pharmacy in 2015 or now
Existing
Currently has at least one pharmacy
Harmony, Minn.
Confluence, Pa.
Each circle
represents
a ZIP code
Pharmacy deserts
Newly created
— Lost all pharmacies since 2015
Existing
— No pharmacy in 2015 or now
Currently has at least one pharmacy
Darrington, Wash.
Harmony, Minn.
Confluence, Pa.
Each circle
represents
a ZIP code