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Competitors follow Wal-Mart's lead on drug discounts

Posted Jun 13 2008, 10:12 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from Truman Lewis at partner blog ConsumerAffairs.com.

Safeway will begin offering $4 prescriptions on hundreds of generic drugs at stores in the eastern United States and parts of the Midwest, becoming the latest supermarket chain to follow the trail blazed by Wal-Mart two years ago.

The discounted prescriptions will be available at stores in the Chicago area, the District of Columbia, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey. The list of $4 drugs includes the antibiotic amoxicillin, blood-pressure medication atenolol, and levothyroxine for thyroid disease.

Wal-Mart shook up the pharmacy business when it introduced its program two years ago. Target quickly followed, but other stores have been slow to do so.

Kroger unveiled its $4 program in February, modeled closely after Wal-Mart's. Walgreens sells a 90-day supply of generics for $12.99, and some regional supermarket chains have discounted some generic prices.

Wal-Mart has been keeping the pressure on.

On May 6, Wal-Mart expanded its program to include orders for 90-day supplies, and additional drugs to treat osteoporosis and *** cancer, as well as cutting the price in half for more than 1,000 popular over-the-counter drugs, setting off competitive responses by many grocery chains, including Sweetbay Supermarket, Hannaford Bros., Food Lion and Harveys Supermarkets.

Shop around

Consumers should be sure to shop around. The most publicized programs are not always the cheapest.

A survey released last week by Consumer Reports found that price fluctuations can be dramatic -- sometimes more than $100 for the same prescription -- even within the same chain, depending on whether consumers are filling their prescriptions in, say, Omaha, Neb., or Billings, Mont.

Costco was the cheapest for the four drugs CR sought quotes for, followed by AARP.com and Wal-Mart. Walgreens and Rite Aid were among the priciest for the four drugs.

Consumer Reports said it placed more than 500 calls to 163 pharmacies nationwide to gauge price differences for four prescription drugs, three name-brand medicines and one generic.

Other articles of interest at ConsumerAffairs.com:

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Comments

 

Actually Walmart isn't the hero related to prescription drugs that you may think.  Medicare's Part D program started the $4.00 RX when it began enrolling everyone on medicare in 2006.  Walmart and the other stores are just following a plan to make their life simpler.   They all took Medicare Part D and expanded it to everyone instead of just Part D enrollees.

Schnucks Markets based in the St. Louis area started providing free precription generic antibiotics.  

Walgreens has always been the worse place to go for prescription drugs or anything else for that matter, unless its on sale.

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