As the nation’s health system continues to move from fee-for-service to a value-based model, community pharmacy will continue to move steadily from just a dispenser of prescriptions to more of a retail healthcare model, with a growing focus on pharmacy service and a growing reliance on the front-end of the store to drive profitability.
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Here is a look at 12 trends DSN expects to see more of in 2016:
1. Pharmacy delivery apps
Thanks to technology, I don’t even have to wait on line at Starbucks anymore — I can click-and-collect my coffee, too.
In five years, no one is going to want to trudge to the drug store in the snow to pick up a prescription. And a number of start-ups are emerging — and looking for pharmacies to partner with — to make sure that consumers won’t have to.
By November, Zipdrug, which launched in July in New York City, was reporting that customer counts had doubled month after month, with a 35% repeat business rate. Zipdrug plans to explore new markets for entry in 2016.
Last month, Deliv announced a pilot program with Walgreens in 67 Dallas-area stores.
Expect a lot more activity on this front in 2016, as omnichannel health continues to evolve.
2. Wearables 2.0: Medical devices
According to Soreon Research, the wearable healthcare market is expected to grow from about $2 billion in 2014 to more than $41 billion in 2020. And while the first wave of devices focused more on fitness-tracking, the next generation of wearables will involve more clinically focused devices targeting chronic conditions.
Empatica, a company based in Cambridge, Mass., is working on a device worn on the wrist that alerts epileptics and their caregivers when the patient has had a seizure. The company also is working on a use for depression.
Meanwhile, Quell, an OTC electric nerve stimulation device worn on the calf to alleviate chronic pain, had just been named one of the 10 “Last Gadget Standing” finalists for the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show as this issue went to press.
3. Dialing up more telehealth
PricewaterhouseCoopers calls telemedicine 1-of-3 critical “deflating” factors that will help slow healthcare spending growth. In 2015, 24 states mandated that private payers cover telemedicine, according to the American Telemedicine Association, with more than 100 bills emerging in state houses across the country looking to further expand coverage for telehealth.
According to an analysis conducted by PwC, utilization of a telehealth model helped reduce costs by 9% among patients with diabetes.
And as much as omnichannel reflects changing consumer preferences and behavior, telehealth — and the widening adoption of it — reflects changing patient attitudes and preferences for how care is delivered. A survey of 1,700 CVS/ MinuteClinic patients who had received care via a telehealth platform found one-third actually preferred to receive care that way versus face-to-face with a clinician.
4. Retail clinics boom
Expect retail clinics to reach some 3,000 by next year. Driving that growth will be enhanced partnerships between retail clinic operators and large health systems, who will increasingly look to clinics to better manage site of care options and to partner to drive improved patient outcomes.
According to PwC, the number of consumers who used a retail clinic rose from about 10% in 2007 to 36% in 2015. Expect these numbers to rise further as the number of beneficiaries enrolled in high-deductible health plans soars in 2016 and beyond.
5. The mental health opportunity
Another area that will see increasing investment from payers, providers and community pharmacy will be in the area of mental health. One-in-5 U.S. adults suffers some form of mental health issue, including anxiety (42 million), depression (16 million) and bipolar disorder (6 million), costing employers about $440 billion annually.
CVS Health plans to add behavioral health to its Pharmacy Advisor clinical program, which identifies gaps in care and adherence.
This is another area where telehealth will play a role, as “more than half of all U.S. counties — all rural — have no practicing mental health clinicians,” according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
6. Consumer-directed health care ramps up
Influencing many of these trends is the continued growth of consumer-directed health plans.
According to data from the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2015 24% of all U.S. workers were enrolled in a high-deductible health plan with some type of HSA option. Further, research from PwC indicated that 44% of employers will consider offering only a high-deductible plan option in the next three years.
Why is that important? “Families in high-deductible plans use fewer brand-name drugs, pursue such low-cost venues as retail clinics and visit doctors less frequently,” according to a PwC Health Research Institute report.
7. The specialty pharmacy patent cliff
In 2015, the industry saw the first biosimilar introduction in the United States — Sandoz’s Zarxio. “At least four biosimilar applications are pending FDA review in 2016, with another 50 in the review process,” noted PwC in a recent report.
It is expected that over the next thre