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News: Publix to offer 7 popular prescription antibiotics for free
Posted on Tuesday, August 07 @ 05:55:30 PDT by Virgil

Society Publix supermarket chain said today it will make seven common prescription antibiotics available for free, joining other major retailers in trying to lure customers to their stores with cheap medications.

The oral antibiotics, representing the most commonly filled at the chain's pharmacies, will be available at no cost to anyone with a prescription as often as they need them, Publix CEO Charlie Jenkins Jr. said. Fourteen-day supplies of the seven drugs will be available at all 684 of the chain's pharmacies in five Southern states.

The prescription antibiotics available under the program are amoxicillin, cephalexin, penicillin VK, erythromycin, ampicillin, sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim, and ciprofoxacin.

Gov. Charlie Crist went to a suburban Fort Myers store to help the company make the announcement and to praise the Lakeland-based employee-owned company, one of the dominant retailers in the region.

"It can't be any more affordable than free," Crist said.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Kmart and other retailers already offer discounted drug programs. But Publix Super Markets Inc. officials say the company is the first large regional chain to offer certain drugs at no cost. In addition to Florida, the company operates stores in Georgia, South Carolina, Alabama and Tennessee.

With health care costs one of the biggest challenges facing many Americans, Crist said that the private sector's involvement in the solution was "a great trend."

Jenkins acknowledged that increasing pharmacy sales was a part of the company's motivation, but said the company also wanted to contribute to that trend.

"Frankly, we're interested in building our pharmacy business," said Jenkins. "But moreover, we want to help the citizens of our state have affordable health care, and we thought this was just a good start in doing that."

Barbara Lemay, who was shopping in the Publix where Crist and the company made the announcement, said it would be a good start for her.

"I've been on antibiotics occasionally, and to get anything free with the price of medications today is phenomenal," she said. "People just can't afford the medications. You have no insurance, you're looking at hundreds of dollars a month."

Lemay, who gets Social Security benefits, said if she is prescribed one of the antibiotics she definitely would go to Publix to get it, and said it could save her "thousands of dollars."

Dr. Andrew Agwunobi, secretary of Florida's Agency for Health Care Administration and a pediatrician, said many of the antibiotics are prescribed for children, and he noted that Florida has 3.6 million uninsured people and many who have some insurance but no coverage for prescription drugs.

"So I hope (Publix stores) are ready," Agwunobi said, predicting a heavy response.

Wal-Mart last year started offering hundreds of prescription drugs of all different kinds, ranging from diabetes medication to high blood pressure drugs, for $4. It hopes it can draw more shoppers into its stores who may come for prescriptions and then stay to buy in other departments.

Kmart, a unit of Sears Holding Corp., began last month offering a 90-day supply of generic drugs for $15. Now, more than 300 drugs are included in that program.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/sfl-0806publix,0,1726442.story


 
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Re: Publix to offer 7 popular prescription antibiotics for free (Score: 1)
by Virgil on Tuesday, August 07 @ 07:42:28 PDT
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It's always good to see a glimpse of the Kingdom shining in the corporate world. :)


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Re: Publix to offer 7 popular prescription antibiotics for free (Score: 1)
by chrisliv on Tuesday, August 07 @ 09:17:20 PDT
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Yeah,

Market forces, free from State meddling, are usually a good thing for the customer, even when they're gimmicks, price leaders, or non-prices.

But notice how a State executive officer is quick to jump into the spotlight, so as to imply that this was a cooperative effort between a productive and voluntary business enterprise and a tax-consuming, compulsory State.

Like those antibiotics, I expect that, when the State-devised patents expire on a wider number and type of drugs, that the artificially high prices on prescription drugs, especially in North America, will start to come down, overall, if the patient or the doctor takes care in what is being prescribed, and how.

Or, like the widely-prescribed and still very expensive tablets of Staten-class cholesterol reducing drugs, like Lipitor, which is produced in numerous tablet sizes, graduated in steps of around 20 milligrams each, the price of a 40mg tablet and an 80mg tablet is precisely the the same (about $4.50 per tablet), and for good reason. But, anyone being prescribed one 40mg tablet of Lipitor by mouth per day x 90, should not allow a doctor to prescribe it that default way for them. Rather, since tablets can be cut in half, it should be prescribed as 80mg at one half tablet per day x 45. In cases like that Lipitor is half-price.

The difference from $4.50 per day to $2.25 is significant for most elderly patients, who are just trying to lower their cholesterol. And $1600, per year, for a handful of of tablets (365) is quite a a State-protected racket.

Someone might now want to say that without State-invented Intellectual Property and Patents that there would be no searching for disease cures or paid research and development for new drug therapies.

But, if nobody else does, Christians living in God's Kingdom on Earth, as it is in Heaven, should begin to know that not all of Humanity is motivated only by monopolies and handsome sums of money.

Peace to you all,
C. Livingstone


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