Post
Published on February 27, 2020
Aria Ilyad Ahmad, Global Health Foresighting Research Fellow at the Dahdaleh Institute for Global Health Research, was quoted in the 25 Feb 2020 edition of the Financial Post. In an article titled Prescription for disruption: How Amazon could shake up Canada鈥檚 $45-billion pharmacy sector, Ahmad drew on the research he conducts at the Dahdaleh Institute on online pharmacies to comment on Amazon's recent move to trademark the name 'Amazon Pharmacy' in Canada.
Full Article
Prescription for disruption: How Amazon could shake up Canada鈥檚 $45-billion pharmacy sector
Fatima Syed
February 25, 2020
Financial Times
Amazon has filed to trademark the name 'Amazon Pharmacy' in Canada, with the goal of offering prescription drugs and other services on a global scale
When Amazon bought a 46 per cent stake in the now-defunct Drugstore.com over 20 years ago, The Globe and Mail predicted the end of brick-and-mortar pharmacies with a blunt headline: 鈥淔arewell, Preparation H aisle.鈥
It was a prediction that proved premature. Last month, however, news broke that the American e-commerce giant had filed to trademark the name 鈥淎mazon Pharmacy鈥 in Canada, the U.K. and Australia, among others, with the goal of offering prescription drugs, medical instruments, data-processing equipment, hospital services and insurance underwriting, all on a global scale.
If Amazon plans to set up a pharmacy business in Canada, it faces a formidable to-do list, including working within a complicated regulatory environment and submitting to national drug-pricing controls. But some observers welcome the prospect of more competition in the country鈥檚 pharmacy sector 鈥 including one Canadian startup that would find itself directly in Amazon鈥檚 crosshairs.
Though Amazon has eyed the pharmaceutical market for years, the most substantial recent sign the company was serious about the business came in June 2018, when it announced it had beaten out Walmart and other rivals to acquire the e-pharmacy PillPack for about US$753 million. Operating only within the U.S., PillPack has pharmacy licences in all 50 states, in-house expertise on how to deal with payers and benefits managers, multiple pharmacy locations and a call centre. The company puts pills into specially tailored tear-open packages, instead of bottles, to make it easier for patients to take the right pills at the right time.
Despite the acquisition, Amazon hasn鈥檛 indicated it has a bigger pharmacy plan. 鈥淎t present, our focus is on growing PillPack and offering a better pharmacy experience for customers in the United States,鈥 said Candi Jeronimo, an Amazon spokesperson. The company did not comment on its Canadian trademark filing or any plans for a Canadian pharmacy business.
Dominated as it is by a few big players, the lucrative Canadian pharmacy market is ripe for potential disruption. Overall prescription-drug spend in Canada has been steadily growing, standing at around $34 billion last year. The country鈥檚 pharmaceutical spending as a share of GDP is the fifth-highest in the OECD, and its retail pharmacy industry was on track to earn $45 billion last year.
鈥淎mazon wants to drive down the price of everything. They are the best at this,鈥 said Huda Idrees, CEO and founder of Toronto-based Dot Health, a mobile app that manages people鈥檚 health information.
鈥淎nd here鈥檚 the sad part: I don鈥檛 think they鈥檙e going to have a lot of competition. I think it鈥檚 going to be an easy win for them in Canada,鈥 she added, noting that none of the domestic vendors have anything close to PillPack鈥檚 mass ability to deliver drugs to doorsteps. 鈥淭he people who should be shaking in their boots right now is Shoppers Drug Mart.鈥
Shoppers and its subsidiaries make up Canada鈥檚 largest retail pharmacy network. In publishing its 2019 fourth-quarter earnings Thursday, parent company Loblaw said Shoppers drove its overall retail segment growth, with same-store sales increasing by 3.6 per cent, compared to 1.9 per cent for Loblaw鈥檚 grocery division. Shoppers鈥 1,300 locations make it by far the biggest pharmacy player in the country; its closest competitor, Rexall, has over 400 locations. (The parent companies of Shoppers and Rexall both declined to comment on the news of Amazon鈥檚 Canadian pharmacy trademark.)
There is, however, one digital upstart that鈥檚 already hoping to put a dent in the duo鈥檚 market dominance. Founded in 2018, PocketPills is a Surrey, B.C.-based full-service online pharmacy that delivers pre-sorted medication to patients in British Columbia, Alberta, Yukon, the Northwest Territories, Manitoba and Ontario. On Wednesday, the startup announced the close of a US$7.35-million financing round, which it said will allow it to introduce same-day delivery in some Canadian metro regions, as well as expand into Nova Scotia in the second quarter of 2020 and to Quebec later in the year.
PocketPills co-founder Abhinav Gupta said the funding, by India-based WaterBridge Ventures as well as a Canadian family office the company declined to name, will also help it improve the pharmacy鈥檚 mobile app and integrate other Canadian partners like insurance and telemedicine companies into its platform. The goal, Gupta said, is to reinvent the entire health-care experience, not just create an online marketplace for medicine. 鈥淲e want to make things easier for a patient鈥檚 entire journey,鈥 he said.
Gupta said he was excited by Amazon鈥檚 potential entry into Canadian pharmacy, saying the industry was seeing 鈥渁 paradigm shift鈥 in consumer health behaviour that the tech giant can help speed up, the way Gupta believes his firm has done. 鈥淚f you think of buying anything these days, you ask, 鈥業s this available online?鈥欌 he said. 鈥淚t hasn鈥檛 happened in pharmacy, but it was only a matter of time.鈥
Gupta said 20 per cent of Canadians who take daily medication due to chronic illnesses like diabetes don鈥檛 have to go to a doctor, but do have to visit a pharmacy every month. According to Statistics Canada, 29 per cent of Canadians who required health care from 2009 to 2013 reported having trouble accessing services. Of those who needed routine care, the most common difficulties included issues with contacting health-care professionals, booking appointments and waiting too long to get them.
Internet pharmacies can solve those problems, Gupta said, as they provide the convenience of e-commerce along with price transparency, comparison shopping and access to medication that may be in low stock locally.
Amazon鈥檚 biggest struggle in Canada could be working with the industry鈥檚 strict regulations. While its scale has let it undercut competitors鈥 pricing in other sectors, its Canadian pharmacy play would be limited in that regard by the country鈥檚 price-controlled drugs, maintained through the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board, a federal agency. The U.S., by comparison, does little to regulate drug prices. Canada is also 鈥渁 patchwork of drug coverage programs,鈥 where people don鈥檛 pay out of pocket as much as in the U.S., said Barbara Gobis, director of the Pharmacists Clinic at the University of British Columbia. Along with stringent licensing regulations that vary by province, Amazon would also have to deal with the country鈥檚 more complicated social assistance and pay program.
The wildcard, for Amazon and other pharmacy players exploring e-commerce, is how Canadians will respond to the prospect of the sector moving online.
鈥淭he health-care system has to be disrupted. That鈥檚 what (Amazon CEO) Jeff Bezos is doing right now,鈥 said Peter Pennefather, a professor at the University of Toronto鈥檚 Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy. 鈥淏ut what we haven鈥檛 seen yet is a commitment to the two most important elements in a pharmaceutical transaction: the person with a prescription and the personal circle of care.鈥
鈥淧harmacy is so much more than mailing drugs,鈥 said Gobis. 鈥淭he reality is that a mail-order pharmacy isn鈥檛 going to meet the needs of somebody who needs treatment today 鈥 somebody who may not be willing to put their health in the mail.鈥
Aria Ilyad Ahmad, a global health research fellow at 91亚色 who has served as a consultant to the World Health Organization (WHO), said Canada will have to contend with figuring out how to police and 鈥渘egotiate trust鈥 with an internet pharmacy.
鈥(Amazon has) moved very carefully and strategically. They鈥檝e spent two decades trying to get in this space. This seems inevitable,鈥 Ahmad said. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 difficult to restrict the trade of goods that are typically controlled, like medicine. If Amazon does this, they could create a bit of a free market that has public health risks of irrational consumption.
鈥淚nternet pharmacies are diverted marketplaces. They were a contributing factor in the opioid crisis in the United States,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e will have to create mechanisms: how do you craft rules for internet pharmacies that protect public health, consumers, and allow us to take advantage of being in that online place?鈥
"It鈥檚 difficult to restrict the trade of goods that are typically controlled, like medicine. If Amazon does this, they could create a bit of a free market that has public health risks of irrational consumption."
- Aria Ilyad Ahmad
The WHO has long listed access to medicine as a basic human right, and Pennefather said companies like Amazon can help increase that access. 鈥淏ut if the pill itself is not curing people,鈥 he asked, 鈥渨ill simply having a more efficient distribution of the medication be good enough?鈥
Idrees鈥檚 big question is whether Canadians see a need for an Amazon pharmacy. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he honest answer is, I could totally see a reality where Amazon comes in like spends a ton of money and fails. Because they incorrectly estimated market demand for this.鈥
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know if Amazon is going to put every pharmacy out of business or if every pharmacy is doing a good job caring for its patients,鈥 Gobis said. 鈥淚 question whether we are moving in the direction of getting drugs cheaper through the mail 鈥 although I don鈥檛 think it would be that much cheaper in Canada because of pricing controls 鈥 without acknowledging the risks and needs for patients to have connections with somebody who knows how to help with drug therapy.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 what scares me.鈥
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