USC researchers call for legislation to combat ‘pharmacy deserts’

Research shows many people in low-income California communities are having a hard time filling their prescriptions because pharmacies in their area are struggling and even closing.

One in four communities in Los Angeles County, for example, is now considered a “pharmacy desert.”

Dima Qato, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences at the University of Southern California, and her team have developed a mapping tool that reveals the extent of the problem, which she said hits communities of color hardest in both urban and rural areas.

“I think that it’s getting worse,” Qato observed. “In the next several years, a lot of chains have announced plans to close many of their stores. At the same time, one and three independents are at risk for closing.”

Qato would like to see Congress reform the practices of pharmacy benefit managers, who decide where a patient can go to fill their medications, how much a pharmacy will be paid and which pharmacies are considered “in network” for health insurance. The bipartisan Pharmacy Benefits Manager Accountability Act, currently in Congress, would increase oversight of the industry.

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS