- Organizer says company reneged on promised public apology
- Pharmacists cite insufficient staff, excessive workload
After the walkouts began Thursday, the chain dispatched Chief Pharmacy Officer
After the meeting, pharmacists postponed further walkouts and scheduled talks for next month to address long-term solutions to issues pharmacists raised, including hiring more support staff and alleviating workload, the organizer said.
However, a spokesperson for CVS said late Tuesday that Shah had agreed to send a personal memo to pharmacy teams regarding the company’s delayed response to their concerns, rather than a public apology. That led to the decision to resume the walkouts, the organizer said.
Pharmacy Walkouts
Last week’s actions closed about 10 pharmacies in the Kansas City area, some of them in
CVS said early Wednesday that the workers’ activity is uncommon and the company takes it seriously.
“We can’t speculate on what activity may occur today and we’re doing everything we can to help ensure our pharmacies are open to take care of patients,” the company said in an emailed statement.
Tensions between US companies and employees are rising. President
Pharmacists often bear the brunt of patients’ anger and frustration over complex insurance plans and persistent drug shortages. The situation has reached a tipping point in Missouri, Tanoe said, where there’s a backlog of prescriptions and insufficient staff to answer phones, meet company goals and manage the recent rollout of new Covid-19 vaccinations.
CVS’s Measures
Drugstore chains are struggling to compete as sales of both pharmaceuticals and the retail items in the front of their stories increasingly move online. While both CVS and
CVS has made efforts to support pharmacy teams in Kansas City and Missouri, including bringing in more staffing support and providing additional training, according to a spokesperson.
“We are focused on addressing their concerns, but we don’t think preventing patients from getting the care they need is ever the answer,” the chain said Tuesday in a separate statement.
Pharmacists have raised similar concerns before. Tanoe, a former Walgreens pharmacist in Oklahoma City, created the hashtag #pizzaisnotworking in 2021 in response to
Walgreens and other drugstores have said they’re using technology and
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Kelly Gilblom, John Lauerman
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