CVS Plans to End Sales of Tobacco Products by October 1!
Wednesday, February 12, 2014
Posted by: Natalia Gromov
Washington Post:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/cvs-caremark-plans-stop-selling-tobacco-products/2014/02/05/5a31670a-8e5d-11e3-878e-d76656564a01_story.html
New York times:
CVS
Plans to End Sales of Tobacco Products by Oct. 1
By
STEPHANIE STROM
6
February 2014
Copyright
2014. The New York Times Company. All Rights Reserved.
CVS/Caremark,
the country’s largest drugstore chain, announced on Wednesday that it planned
to stop selling cigarettes and other tobacco products by October.
The
company’s move was yet another sign of its metamorphosis into becoming more of
a health care provider than a largely retail business, with its stores offering
more miniclinics and health advice to aid customers visiting its pharmacies.
While
the company’s decision will cost it an estimated $2 billion in sales from
tobacco buyers, that is a mere dent in its overall sales of $123 billion in
2012.
"We
have about 26,000 pharmacists and nurse practitioners helping patients manage
chronic problems like high cholesterol, high blood pressure and heart disease,
all of which are linked to smoking,” said Larry J. Merlo, chief executive of
CVS. "We came to the decision that cigarettes and providing health care just
don’t go together in the same setting.”
CVS does not sell electronic cigarettes, the highly popular
but debated devices that deliver nicotine without tobacco and emit a rapidly
vanishing vapor instead of smoke. It said it was waiting for guidance on the
devices from the Food and Drug Administration, which has expressed interest in
regulating e-cigarettes.
Some
major retail stores like Walmart and convenience stores still sell cigarettes
and other tobacco products, although antismoking groups and health care
professionals will probably use CVS’s decision to try to pressure others to
consider doing so. Municipalities have also begun enacting legislation
governing where cigarettes can be sold.
Kathleen
Sebelius, secretary of Health and Human Services, said in a statement that the
CVS decision was "an unprecedented step in the retail industry” and
predicted it would have "considerable impact.”
Ms.
Sebelius said that each day, some 3,200 children under 18 will try a cigarette
and 700 will go on to become daily smokers. That means, she said, that 5.6
million American children alive today will die premature due to diseases linked
to smoking.
"Today’s
CVS/Caremark announcement helps bring our country closer to achieving a
tobacco-free generation,” she said. "I hope others will follow their lead in
this important step to curtail tobacco use.”
When
San Francisco first proposed banning the sale of tobacco products in pharmacies
in 2008, the Walgreen Company sued, contending it was unfair to place such
restrictions on drugstore operators and not on grocery and discount stores with
pharmacies inside.
Two
years later, the city came back two with a ban that included all stores with
embedded pharmacies. That prompted retailers like Safeway and Costco to stop
selling cigarettes in their stores with pharmacies.
A
number of municipalities in Massachusetts, including Boston, have similar bans
in place, a few of which also include prohibitions on the sale of e-cigarettes.
Otis
W. Brawley, chief medical officer at the American Cancer Society, said other
local government entities were weighing similar measures. "If you’re in the
business of promoting health and providing health care, it’s very hypocritical
to be selling tobacco products,” Dr. Brawley said. "It just doesn’t make sense
and in fact is almost a conflict of interest.”
And
as for driving away customers to competitors, Troyen A. Brennan, the executive
vice president and chief medical officer for CVS, said: "It’s obvious that the
average person will just find somewhere else to buy cigarettes. What we’re
thinking about is if others want to emulate this business decision we’ve made,
then over time that will make cigarettes less available — and scientific
literature does suggest that a reduction in the availability of cigarettes
reduces smoking.”
Dr.
Brennan, together with Steven A. Schroeder of the Smoking Cessation Leadership
Center at the University of California, San Francisco, wrote an op-ed article
making the case for eliminating tobacco products from drugstores in The Journal
of the American Medical Association published online on Wednesday.
Some
18 percent of American adults smoke, down from 42 percent in 1965. In places
like New York City, which has used a combination of steep taxes on cigarettes
and bans on smoking in most places to discourage smokers, the decline is even
greater, down to 14 percent.
But
health experts remain concerned because the rate of decline has stagnated over
the last decade, and some 480,000 deaths each year are linked to smoking. From
1999 to 2003, for example, the smoking prevalence among high schoolgirls
dropped 37 percent, according to the Centers for Disease Control, but from 2003
to 2007, the decline was only 2.3 percent.
Earlier
this month, a group of seven advocacy organizations including the American
Heart Association and the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids called on governments
to take steps to reduce smoking rates to less than 10 percent over the next
decade and ensure no American is exposed to secondhand smoke within five years.
"We
have seen the decrease in initiation of smoking plateau, particularly among
some populations of young people, and we’ve been working very hard on those
populations that have been stubbornly hard to reduce but we need to redouble
our efforts,” said Risa Lavizzo-Mourey, the chief executive of the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation, which has played a large role in developing programs,
strategies and policies that have been used to reduce smoking in this country.
"Decreasing the availability of tobacco products as CVS is doing is an
important and bold step toward making it harder for people to get access to
these harmful products.”
Coincidentally,
the F.D.A. announced on Tuesday the start of a national education program aimed
at preventing smoking among youth. The ads, which will be distributed across
social media platforms, try to show teenagers the toll that smoking takes on
the body in memorable ways, such as a young man who uses a pair of pliers to
pull a stained tooth from his mouth to buy a pack of cigarettes and a young
woman who complains about having to go outside in the rain to talk to her
boyfriend, a smoker.
A
shortage of primary care doctors and expanding access to health care coverage
under the Affordable Care Act is turning drugstore chains into big players in
the nation’s health care system. Consumers routinely get flu shots in
drugstores, for instance, and clinics staffed by nurse practitioners or
physician assistants and offering basic care for common ailments like strep
throat or pink eye are popping up everywhere from Walgreens to Walmart.
A
report last year by Accenture predicted such so-called retail clinics were
poised to at a rate of 25 to 30 percent over the next few years, which would
swell the number to 2,800 in 2015, from 1,400 in 2012.
CVS’s
800 MinuteClinics already account for most of such outlets, and Mr. Merlo said
the company hoped to add another 700 for a total of 1,500 by 2017. For that
reason, he said, the decision to stop selling tobacco products "was really more
of a discussion about how to position the company for future growth.”
The
company estimated that the decision would erase 17 cents in earnings per share
of stock annually, but that it had identified ways of offsetting the impact on
profits. (The earnings hit this year will only be 6 cents to 9 cents a share
while the company works through its remaining inventory of tobacco products.)
The
company hopes to make up some of the lost revenue and income with a smoking
cessation program that it is starting this spring with the goal of getting half
a million Americans to stop smoking. "This is a great example of how we’re
evolving from a retail company to a health care company,” said Helena Foulkes,
executive vice president for CVS. "This is the kind of offering we can bring to
clients like insurance plans and companies, many of which will pay for such a
program.”
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