Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
CVS To Open More Stores This Year Than It Closes, Signaling Comeback
CVS Health Corp. plans to open more pharmacies than it closes in 2026, marking the end of a four-year contraction for the largest American retail pharmacy chain. CVS will open about 60 stores this year, including nearly 20 small pharmacy-only sites, spokesperson Amy Thibault said. The company will also close a few dozen locations, she said. (Swetlitz, 3/30)
CVS Health plans to open five new locations in Chicago this year but dont expect to see chips, candy or nail polish for sale. The new locations on the South, West and Southwest sides will offer pharmacy services only, unlike the larger stores that the company is known for. The sites represent a new tack for CVS, as retail pharmacies continue to struggle with how to best serve customers who are increasingly shopping for everyday items and medications online. (Schencker, 3/30)
More pharmacy news
A settlement between Express Scripts and the Federal Trade Commission designed to curb anticompetitive business practices may counterintuitively have the opposite effect, pharmacies warn. In February, Cigna division Express Scripts agreed to a series of changes to resolve a federal lawsuit alleging the pharmacy benefit manager inflated insulin prices. The settlement, Express Scripts pledged shift to a rebate-free model, and other actions by lawmakers and regulators were viewed by some as positive developments that would foster equitable and transparent practices. (Tong, 3/30)
In other pharmaceutical developments
In the latest dustup over a groundbreaking HIV prevention medicine, Doctors Without Borders has harshly criticized the manufacturer for refusing to sell its treatment directly to humanitarian organizations. (Silverman, 3/30)
For decades, surviving a heart attack has come with a lifelong prescription: Stay on medications called beta-blockers to help protect your heart. But doctors are taking a closer look at whether long-term beta-blocker use is really necessary, especially beyond the first year of recovery. (Howard, 3/30)
Measuring cholesterol levels has long been the main way doctors assess the risk of heart disease. Increasingly, people are opting, too, for a simple, relatively affordable test: a coronary artery calcium scan, or CAC. The tests recently got a boost from influential clinical guidelines issued earlier this month by leading cardiology groups. These guidelines also included, for the first time, recommended levels of LDLknown as low-density lipoprotein or bad cholesterolbased on calcium scores from the scans. (Reddy, 3/30)
A new study suggests that newer antibiotics designed for some of the most drug-resistant bacterial infections are being used more frequently but arent making a dent in survival rates. The study, published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases, found that, among patients hospitalized with a difficult-to-treat (DTR) gram-negative bacterial infections, initial treatment with one of six antibiotics approved in recent years rose by nearly 300% from 2016 to 2023. But there was no observed reduction in mortality among the patients.(Dall, 3/30)
Adding a GLP-1 agonist to psoriasis medication significantly improved outcomes in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA) and overweight or obesity, a phase III randomized trial showed. (Bankhead, 3/30)