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Journal of Primary Health Care Journal of Primary Health Care Society
Journal of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Describing the consumer profile of different types of community pharmacy in Aotearoa New Zealand

James Nind https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7760-7586 1 * , Carlo A. Marra https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2625-2121 1 , Shane Scahill https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5350-696X 2 , Alesha Smith https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1056-9527 1
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

1 School of Pharmacy, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. Email: alesha.smith@otago.ac.nz, carlo.marra@otago.ac.nz

2 School of Pharmacy, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. Email: s.scahill@auckland.ac.nz

* Correspondence to: ninja113@student.otago.ac.nz

Handling Editor: Tim Stokes

Journal of Primary Health Care 15(4) 376-381 https://doi.org/10.1071/HC23083
Submitted: 30 July 2023  Accepted: 10 October 2023  Published: 26 October 2023

© 2023 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing on behalf of The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND)

Abstract

Introduction

Aotearoa New Zealand has a range of community pharmacies; independent, corporate, hybrid, and mail-order, each with differing service delivery models. Corporate and hybrid pharmacies do not charge the NZ$5.00 co-payment on standard prescriptions; however, prescription co-payments were universally removed from 1 July 2023.

Aim

This research aims to describe the consumer profiles of Aotearoa New Zealand’s different types of community pharmacies prior to the removal of the prescription co-payment.

Methods

A nationwide retrospective observational study linked 1-year of dispensing data (1 March 2022–28 February 2023) from the Pharmaceutical Collection to patient enrolment data using a National Health Index (NHI) number to identify the demographic details of people who use the different pharmacy types. People were assigned to a particular type of pharmacy if they collected at least 70% of their prescriptions from there; if they did not meet this threshold, they were defined as mixed users.

Results

Independent pharmacies had an older customer base and fewer Asian users compared to other pharmacy types. Hybrid pharmacies served a greater proportion of Pacific peoples and those from areas of high deprivation. Māori made up relatively equal proportions of users across all pharmacy types. Areas without major cities had fewer corporate pharmacies and only four hybrid pharmacies were identified outside of Auckland.

Discussion

There appears to be differences in the consumer profiles of the different pharmacy types. These results will serve as a comparison to how removing prescription co-payments shifts patients’ behaviour.

Keywords: community pharmacy, consumers, discount pharmacy, equity, health policy, independent pharmacy, New Zealand health strategy, pharmacy services.

WHAT GAP THIS FILLS
What is already known: There are a range of different types of community pharmacy in Aotearoa New Zealand; however, universal definitions have not been established. Within Aotearoa New Zealand, there is inequitable access to medicine where prescription co-payments act as a barrier. Although the decision to universally remove prescription co-payments should help, we do not know who is already accessing free prescriptions through corporate and hybrid pharmacies.
What this study adds: This research provides a current consumer profile for each type of community pharmacy in Aotearoa New Zealand, which can serve as a comparator to assess how removing prescription co-payments changes consumer habits. Information is provided regarding the geographic distribution of the different types of community pharmacy throughout Aotearoa New Zealand.

Introduction

Within Aotearoa New Zealand, community pharmacies operate as both primary healthcare facilities and businesses. All pharmacies provide medicine dispensing services; however, some provide additional patient care services such as treating minor ailments, providing health education, or collaborating with other health professionals.1 These services often incur higher costs than they can recoup, as these services do not incur a patient charge, so despite their contribution to the health system, the provision of these services is at the pharmacy’s discretion.1 The varying strategies employed to remain profitable has resulted in a range of different pharmacy service delivery models.

During the study period, patients typically paid NZ$5.00 as a co-payment for most prescriptions, or NZ$15.00 for specialist and dental prescriptions, for their first 20 prescription items in the calendar year, after which patients no longer have to pay prescription co-payments.2 Additionally, patients must pay the drug cost for unsubsidised or partially subsidised medicines.

Most pharmacies are owner-operated, known commonly as independent pharmacies. A subset of this group pay to gain the recognition and support of a franchise; the most recognisable being Unichem and Life pharmacies; however, they retain their autonomy to operate independently. Corporate pharmacies, also known as discount pharmacies, are a recent market entry. They have been able to offer free prescriptions by paying the prescription co-payments on behalf of their patients; however, patients are still required to pay the drug costs for unsubsidised medicines.

By offering free prescriptions, corporate pharmacies have challenged Aotearoa New Zealand’s community pharmacy landscape. Chemist Warehouse St Luke’s was the first to open in November 2017 and the model has proved successful and continued to grow with 16 new corporate pharmacies opening between July 2021 and June 2022 while 30 independent pharmacies closed.3,4 This has put more focus on retailing to generate revenue, sustain profitability and remain in business.5,6

The strategy of offering free prescriptions has been followed by several independent pharmacies, and we use the label hybrid pharmacies to identify this service model. Andrew Gaudin, Chief Executive of New Zealand’s Pharmacy Guild, voiced concern that corporate pharmacies are using free prescriptions as loss leaders to generate foot traffic for their retail focus instead of prioritising healthcare delivery for their patients.7 Depending on the, now disbanded District Health Board (DHB), pharmacies had to prove their point of difference. In the case of Countdown Wainuiomata, Rachel Haggerty, Director of Strategy, Planning and Performance for the Hutt Valley and Capital and Coast DHB, stated that free prescriptions would increase equity of access to medicines for the area’s Māori and Pacific populations.8 However, there is currently no evidence to suggest Māori and Pacific peoples use corporate pharmacies more frequently than other pharmacy types.

The recent decision to remove prescription co-payments from 1 July 2023, aimed at improving equitable access to medicine, has been applauded for levelling price competition within the community pharmacy sector.9,10 However, as there is no evidence as to how much influence prescription prices have on how people choose which pharmacy to use, it is difficult to anticipate the impact removing prescription co-payments will have on consumer habits.

This research aims to describe the consumer profile of different types of community pharmacy in Aotearoa New Zealand. The research also aims to assess the utilisation of free prescriptions (via corporate and hybrid pharmacies) and serve as a baseline for understanding the impact of significant health policy change with the removal of prescription co-payments from 1 July 2023.

Methods

The pharmaceutical collection, a database that captures data from all prescriptions dispensed in community pharmacies, was used to create a retrospective observational cohort study design, which included everyone who collected a prescription dispensed at a community pharmacy between 1 March 2022 and 28 February 2023.

An individual’s demographic information: age, ethnicity, deprivation quintile, and gender from the Primary Health Organisation (PHO) dataset was linked via an encrypted National Health Index (NHI) capturing 95% of all New Zealanders. A crude proxy for medication burden was determined using the count of prescription items collected in the study period for each person.

The research team created a list of Aotearoa New Zealand’s community pharmacies using Healthpoint, a national directory designed to provide current information on accessing health services.11 Pharmacies were categorised into one of four groups: corporate, mail-order, independent, or hybrid. Pharmacies part of Chemist Warehouse, Bargain Chemist, or Countdown brands were classified as corporate pharmacies. Zoom, PillDrop and Pharmacy Direct pharmacies were grouped as mail-order pharmacies. The remaining pharmacies were classified as hybrid if they advertised free prescriptions, or were labelled independent if not. Pharmacies were contacted regarding prescription co-payments if the information on Healthpoint was ambiguous. Whether pharmacies belonged to a franchise (eg Unichem) was not considered.

Data analysis

If individuals collected at least 70% of their prescriptions from one type of pharmacy, either independent, hybrid, mail-order or corporate, they were assigned as a user of that type of pharmacy. If they did not collect 70% of their prescriptions from any one type of pharmacy, they were assigned as a mixed user.

Sensitivity testing was performed to determine whether a greater percentage cut-off point (≥75%, ≥80%) should be applied, but the results achieved using both models were not different. Pearson chi-squared tests were used to test the significance of the differences between the demographics of each type of pharmacy users mentioned earlier.

Ethics

This study received ethical approval from the University of Otago ethics committee (HD23/056). Individual patient consent was not required to use these data. Anonymity is preserved by encrypted NHI information.

Results

Nearly three-quarters (n = 3 796 503) of Aotearoa New Zealands’s population (estimated n = 5 223 100), collected a prescription from one of its 1004 community pharmacies during the year-long study period.12 The consumer profile of each pharmacy type is displayed in Table 1. Just over three-quarters (76.8%) were users of independent pharmacies.

Table 1.Pharmacy user demographics.

CorporateHybridMail-orderMixedIndependentP value
Total386 667 (10.2)179 504 (4.7)5104 (0.1)309 076 (8.1)2 916 152 (76.8)
Deprivation
 1 (least deprived)70 523 (18.2)16 532 (9.2)910 (17.8)44 906 (14.5)571 467 (19.6)<0.0001
 271 350 (18.5)19 770 (11.0)1034 (20.3)50 511 (16.3)538 759 (18.5)<0.0001
 369 181 (17.9)24 128 (13.4)1086 (21.3)52 569 (17.0)571 296 (19.6)<0.0001
 488 202 (22.8)33 698 (18.8)927 (18.2)66 538 (21.5)609 938 (20.9)<0.0001
 5 (most deprived)87 411 (22.6)85 376 (47.6)1147 (22.5)94 552 (30.6)624 692 (21.4)<0.0001
Age (years)
 <1344 180 (11.4)32 609 (18.2)164 (3.2)57 980 (18.8)438 997 (15.1)<0.0001
 13–2457 832 (15.0)23 808 (13.3)137 (2.7)46 520 (15.1)343 834 (11.8)<0.0001
 25–40105 058 (27.2)40 824 (22.7)473 (9.3)87 619 (28.3)538 804 (18.5)<0.0001
 41–5577 120 (19.9)34 131 (19.0)876 (17.2)54 066 (17.5)538 705 (18.5)<0.0001
 56–7068 329 (17.7)31 126 (17.3)1689 (33.1)42 587 (13.8)592 706 (20.3)<0.0001
 71–8531 473 (8.1)14 714 (8.2)1532 (30.0)18 171 (5.9)385 347 (13.2)<0.0001
 >852675 (0.7)2292 (1.3)233 (4.6)2133 (0.7)77 759 (2.7)<0.0001
Gender
 Female216 651 (56.0)92 451 (51.5)2509 (49.2)178 696 (57.8)1 562 399 (53.6)<0.0001
 Male170 016 (44.0)87 053 (48.5)2595 (50.8)130 380 (42.2)1 353 753 (46.4)<0.0001
Ethnicity
 Asian114 516 (29.6)51 147 (28.5)1018 (19.9)74 138 (24.0)301 595 (10.3)<0.0001
 European/other188 014 (48.6)54 081 (30.1)3152 (61.8)147 492 (47.7)2 022 108 (69.3)<0.0001
 Māori53 635 (13.9)31 766 (17.7)634 (12.4)50 291 (16.3)433 032 (14.8)<0.0001
 Pacific peoples30 502 (7.9)42 510 (23.7)300 (5.9)37 155 (12.0)159 417 (5.5)<0.0001
Medication burden
 1–5181 737 (47.0)85 227 (47.5)1026 (20.1)109 106 (35.3)1 440 813 (49.4)<0.0001
 6–9126 784 (32.8)54 462 (30.3)1426 (27.9)124 307 (40.2)889 395 (30.5)<0.0001
 10–1969 742 (18.0)33 855 (18.9)2158 (42.3)67 130 (21.7)497 893 (17.1)<0.0001
 19+8404 (2.2)5960 (3.3)494 (9.7)8533 (2.8)88 051 (3.0)<0.0001

Data are provided as n (%).

Age and gender

A greater proportion of the older age bands were mail-order and independent pharmacy users than corporate and hybrid pharmacy users, whereas younger age bands made up the greatest proportion of mixed pharmacy users. Women made up a greater proportion of all types of pharmacy users except for mail-order pharmacies (Table 1).

Equity

Hybrid pharmacies had a greater proportion of users residing in deprivation five areas (areas of higher deprivation) and fewer from deprivation one areas (areas of lower deprivation) than other pharmacy types. A slightly greater proportion of mixed pharmacy users resided in deprivation five areas than the users of other types of pharmacy. Hybrid pharmacies had a greater proportion of Pacific peoples users than other pharmacy types. Māori also made up slightly greater proportions of hybrid pharmacy and mixed users than other pharmacy types. Independent pharmacies had a greater proportion of European/other users and a smaller proportion of Asian users than other pharmacy types.

Medicine burden

Mail-order pharmacy users had a high burden of medicine use, with over half (52.0%) receiving at least 10 prescription items over the study period. Patients who collected less than five medications over the study period made up equal proportions of corporate, hybrid and independent pharmacy users.

Location

The geographical distribution of each type of pharmacy is displayed in Table 2. Only 8.3% (n = 4) of hybrid pharmacies were located outside the Auckland region, which includes Counties Manukau and Waitemata, and there were none in the South Island. Provincial areas without major cities, such as South Canterbury, Tairāwhiti, and the West Coast, lack any, or have fewer, corporate pharmacies.

Table 2.Geographical distribution of pharmacies in New Zealand.A

CorporateHybridIndependentPopulation B
Total90 (9.0)48 (4.8)863 (86.0)3 796 503
Auckland20 (11.5)23 (13.2)131 (75.3)839 489 (17.1)
Bay of Plenty4 (6.9)2 (3.4)52 (89.7)243 741 (5.0)
Canterbury17 (15.6)092 (84.4)564 111 (11.5)
Capital and Coast7 (11.7)053 (88.3)344 090 (7.0)
Counties Manukau9 (9.3)17 (17.5)71 (73.2)633 620 (12.9)
Hawkes Bay2 (5.7)033 (94.3)169 609 (3.5)
Hutt3 (9.4)029 (90.6)125 876 (2.6)
Lakes1 (5.0)019 (95.0)115 471 (2.3)
Mid Central1 (3.7)026 (96.3)169 898 (3.5)
Nelson Marlborough1 (3.1)031 (96.9)157 195 (3.2)
Northland2 (5.6)1 (2.8)33 (91.7)178 247 (3.6)
Southern3 (3.8)075 (96.2)331 551 (6.7)
South Canterbury0012 (100.0)60 408 (1.2)
Tairāwhiti007 (100.0)51 179 (1.0)
Taranaki4 (14.3)024 (85.7)118 673 (2.4)
Waikato6 (7.1)1 (1.2)78 (91.8)437 273 (8.9)
Wairarapa008 (100.0)48 778 (1.0)
Waitemata10 (11.8)4 (4.7)71 (83.5)229 556 (4.7)
West Coast004 (100.0)32 587 (0.7)
Whanganui0014 (100.0)63 910 (1.3)

Data are provided as n (%).

A Mail-order pharmacies are not geographically bound.
B Number of people in the region to collect a prescription

Discussion

This study set out to understand the consumer profile of different types of community pharmacy service models prior to the removal of the prescription co-payment in Aotearoa New Zealand. Although we hypothesised that people living in areas of high deprivation would be more attracted to free prescriptions offered by corporate and hybrid pharmacies than individuals domiciled in areas of less deprivation, only hybrid pharmacies had a greater proportion of users from deprivation five areas. Hybrid pharmacies are most prominent in Counties Manukau, making up 17.5% of pharmacies in that district; an area where 37% of people live in deprivation five areas.13 A study by Evans et al. reported individuals with low incomes were more likely to use an independent pharmacy than a chain pharmacy, which follows a similar model to Aotearoa New Zealand’s corporate pharmacies.14 Mail-order pharmacy users had a greater medication burden, potentially as these pharmacies do not charge when people get four or more regular medications.15,16

Our study showed older people making up a greater proportion of independent pharmacy’s users, which is supported by the study findings of Evans et al., potentially due to older people favouring a traditional pharmacy type they are familiar with.14

Several international studies associate the users of independent pharmacies with a greater medication burden than the users of chain pharmacies, although this was not the case in our study.14,17

These findings have significant implications for policymakers. Considering the decision to remove prescription co-payments from 1 July 2023, this research shows which user groups have been receiving free prescriptions and will serve as a baseline to show whether removing prescription co-payments may change consumer habits and allows evaluation of the effectiveness of removing prescription co-payments from an equity stance.

Other research has found that although co-payments are a barrier, removing charges is often not enough to improve equity, but tackling the wider issue of health equities for Māori and Pacific people requires health organisations to provide ethical, respectful, and culturally safe interactions.18,19 This research is limited as we can only describe the differences in consumer profiles; it is unknown if people are choosing their pharmacy type based on purely financial reasons or for other reasons, making the picture more complex.

Establishing how the cost of prescription co-payments influence people’s choice of pharmacy in Aotearoa and the effect of using different types of pharmacies has on people’s health outcomes are areas of future study we are moving on to.

Conclusion

This research provides a snapshot of the consumer profiles for a range of community pharmacy service models in Aotearoa New Zealand, at one point in time, to policymakers and provides the foundation for a before–after study looking at the impact of public policy on consumer behaviour with respect to pharmacy use.

Data availability

The data that support the findings of this study are available from the New Zealand Ministry of Health. Restrictions apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license for this study. Data are available from the authors (www.matui.co.nz), with the permission of The Ministry of Health, New Zealand. Instructions on how to obtain data can be obtained from https://www.health.govt.nz/nz-health-statistics/national-collections-and-surveys/collections. On request, data from national collections can be made available to researchers and the public.

Conflicts of interest

The research team has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Declaration of funding

JN was supported by a University of Otago Doctoral scholarship.

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