USC Press Release, May 3, 2021. Lack of easy access to prescription medications and other pharmacy-based services may contribute to health disparities “One in three neighborhoods throughout these cities were pharmacy deserts, affecting nearly 15 million people,” said Jenny S. Guadamuz, the study’s first author and postdoctoral fellow at the USC Schaeffer Center and the Program…Continue Reading ‘Pharmacy deserts’ disproportionately affect Black and Latino residents in largest U.S cities
Year: 2021
Walgreens Not Following U.S. Guidance on Pfizer Vaccine Spacing
NY Times, April 5, 2021. Following complaints from customers and the C.D.C., the pharmacy chain will start scheduling Pfizer vaccine doses three weeks apart. Dima Qato, a pharmacist and associate professor at the University of Southern California School of Pharmacy, said she was concerned about how the public perceives inconsistent messages about spacing doses of…Continue Reading Walgreens Not Following U.S. Guidance on Pfizer Vaccine Spacing
‘Pharmacy deserts’ are new front in the race to vaccinate for COVID-19
ABC News, March 6, 2021. In some states, those who need the COVID-19 shot the most have no way to get it….Millions live in ‘pharmacy deserts’ with limited access to COVID-19 vaccine in US. In Chicago, at least a third of the population — or nearly 1 million people — lives in a pharmacy desert,…Continue Reading ‘Pharmacy deserts’ are new front in the race to vaccinate for COVID-19
‘Just not equal at all’: Vaccine rollout in Chicago a microcosm of racial disparities nationwide
USA Today, February 12, 2021. People of color have suffered most from COVID-19. Now that vaccines are here, they are far less likely to have received a first dose for many of the same reasons. “If pharmacies are not available in specific neighborhoods, specifically majority-minority, majority-Black or -Hispanic neighborhoods in Chicago and elsewhere, you’re going…Continue Reading ‘Just not equal at all’: Vaccine rollout in Chicago a microcosm of racial disparities nationwide
How Chicago’s vaccine rollout is inhibited by longstanding inequality
The Guardian, February 5, 2021. Non-white Chicagoans, who makeup a majority of Covid-19 cases, have struggled to get the vaccine due to technology barriers and ‘pharmacy deserts’. Dima Qato, associate professor at the University of Southern California School of Pharmacy and senior fellow at the Schaeffer Center for Health Policy and Economics, has extensively studied…Continue Reading How Chicago’s vaccine rollout is inhibited by longstanding inequality
Pharmacy deserts in Chicago could make it tough for many to get COVID-19 vaccine
ABC Chicago, February 4, 2021. CHICAGO (WLS) — Many Chicagoans are already struggling to fill prescriptions because there are no drugstores in their neighborhoods, and that could also make it tougher to get the COVID-19 vaccine. “My work found that predominantly black and Hispanic neighborhoods in Chicago have fewer pharmacies and are more likely to…Continue Reading Pharmacy deserts in Chicago could make it tough for many to get COVID-19 vaccine
The growth of “pharmacy deserts”
Axios, January 7, 2021. Neighborhoods in cities like Chicago are rapidly becoming places where people can’t fill medical prescriptions locally because their drugstores have shuttered or don’t accept Medicaid. Why it matters: The pandemic has accelerated the growth of “pharmacy deserts” as unprofitable and less-profitable stores have closed. It’s a worrisome trend for the urban…Continue Reading The growth of “pharmacy deserts”
Filling of prescriptions is harder with insurer’s action
AP News, January 2, 2021. CHICAGO (AP) — A December decision by insurer Aetna to drop Walgreens from its Illinois Medicaid plan is making it harder for thousands of low-income Chicago residents to get their prescriptions filled. The Chicago Tribune reports Aetna’s decision to exclude the Walgreens chain from its Aetna Better Health of Illinois…Continue Reading Filling of prescriptions is harder with insurer’s action