Walmart, Walgreens, and CVS? You mean those small pharmacies--two of which also contain insurance companies, and the other one still has its own clinics?
Pharmacies can only give out what people are prescribed, the only things they can push are OTC products. They can't get and sell scheduled drugs without being explicitly tracked.
But you're right about health care in the US. We need a single-payer system to get prices lower, but that means fairness and cutting out unnecessary costs. The whole health insurance industry would cease to exist, and all the people abusing it don't want that to happen.
Cost Plus Drugs exist because the mega pharmacy chains have been colluding to keep prices of both patented and generic prescriptions artificially high. They're not pushing medications (that would require a physician's approval), but they are extracting money from patients once their doctor has done that.
Another problem with OTC is that it leads to healthcare discrimination based on income and insurance quality since these are often not covered.
The US desperately needs to do away with for-profit health insurance and mega hospital corporations, severely limit the patenting and absurd profiteering in pharma, and replace Medicaid and Medicare with better single-payer, universal healthcare like the rest of the world does more cheaply and with better outcomes.
> Pharmacies can only give out what people are prescribed, the only things they can push are OTC products. They can't get and sell scheduled drugs without being explicitly tracked.
I think they can - specifically, the pharmacies that mix drugs locally can mix and sell a drug that's declared in shortage. IIRC Ozempic was in that situation recently.
You mean compounding? They are allowed to dilute to create a specific strength or combine constituents, but they can't actually create stuff from scratch on site any more than you or I can. That would be a laboratory. It's not like you can just buy semaglutide or the derivatives anywhere. It would have to come from the pharmaceutical company.
I looked it up, and I believe what you've heard about ended up just being people offering fake Ozempic.
You're right, I was thinking about compounding pharmacies.
> It's not like you can just buy semaglutide or the derivatives anywhere. It would have to come from the pharmaceutical company.
Pharmaceutical companies don't make those on their own either, they're contracting it off to drug manufacturing plants. The thing I read the other day said that compounding pharmacies order the same stuff from the same factories directly.
Pharmacies can only give out what people are prescribed, the only things they can push are OTC products. They can't get and sell scheduled drugs without being explicitly tracked.
But you're right about health care in the US. We need a single-payer system to get prices lower, but that means fairness and cutting out unnecessary costs. The whole health insurance industry would cease to exist, and all the people abusing it don't want that to happen.