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Posted: Sep 10, 2024

Remembering the day that changed our world

I remember September 11th, 2001, as if it were yesterday. I was working as a relief pharmacist in Morgan City, Alabama, when my wife called to tell me there had been an airplane crash in New York.

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Posted: Oct 29, 2024

Recent pharmacy closures and ECAPS legislation

Like so many of you, we’ve been continuing to follow reports in the media about pharmacy closures. It seems like each of those stories focuses on the obvious downside to the closures—a local place to get prescriptions filled is going away.

Posted: Sep 10, 2024

Remembering the day that changed our world

I remember September 11th, 2001, as if it were yesterday. I was working as a relief pharmacist in Morgan City, Alabama, when my wife called to tell me there had been an airplane crash in New York.

Posted: Sep 3, 2024

Pharmacists: We must accelerate billing for services

For all my 32 years in the profession, pharmacists have been asking for the right to bill third-party payers, namely major medical insurance companies, (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial) for their care services. We’ve had fits and starts, and in some states the uptake has been good because in large part the state pharmacy association has done tremendous work to make the processes of becoming an in-network provider easy to understand and navigate.

Posted: Aug 14, 2024

Retail theft is jeopardizing access to pharmacists

All around us, the pharmacy landscape is changing rapidly. Rite-Aid is working through bankruptcy. Walgreens just announced closure of up to 25% of its stores. Winn-Dixie pharmacies are gone. The National Community Pharmacists Association indicates in verbal communications that one independent pharmacy and three community pharmacies are closing every single day in 2024. Much has been said and written about the impact of PBMs on these closures, but I want to speak to another culprit impacting decisions to close pharmacies: retail theft.

Posted: Jul 24, 2024

Let’s agree to turn down the temperature, and turn up the heat

Early in my career, when I was practicing in Alabama there was a bill before the state legislature related to pharmacy technicians. The state pharmacy association strongly supported the bill, yet one of the big hospitals in the state opposed the bill. I can distinctly remember visiting a legislator’s office to ask for support for the bill and the senator said, “Michael, why do you expect me to support something you can’t even get your profession to agree on?” It was a humbling moment.

Voices of APhA

Perspectives & Stories from Our Staff

Remembering the day that changed our world
James Keagy
/ Categories: CEO Blog

Remembering the day that changed our world

I remember September 11th, 2001, as if it were yesterday. I was working as a relief pharmacist in Morgan City, Alabama, when my wife called to tell me there had been an airplane crash in New York. In these pre-smartphone days, news traveled a little bit slower and the pharmacy I was working in did not have a television so we made do with a radio. I remember the confusion—there were some early reports about additional planes headed for landmarks across Washington, DC. I was an APhA member and had worked at APhA’s headquarters on the National Mall, many of my friends worked in that building, and I remember so distinctly the fear I felt not knowing their fate. 

Everything changed on that day. For weeks to come everyone was united in grief. Even today, seeing footage from that day triggers a deep emotional response. While that grief continues to exist just below the surface, it’s important to recall what we gained from this experience. Nothing is more important than the relationships we have with family and friends, and we sometimes fail to remember this until it’s too late. That September morning was a sobering reminder of the importance of community, how we can lift each other up on the worst of days and celebrate each other on the best. Whether it’s a church or a synagogue, a mosque or a community center, we came together that day and in the days that followed to comfort each other and pray. We disagreed with each other on issues—political issues, cultural issues—then, just as now, but none of those were as important as being together as one community. 

We are living through some of the most divisive times in our country's history. Both sides of the aisle paint their opponents as enemies. But we aren’t enemies, we are all Americans who love our country and want all to succeed. The bond we share is a love of country and community, and no bond can be as impactful as that. 

I’m hopeful for our future, both our countries and our professions. Let us never forget that tragedy of September 11th, 2001, and remember those who lost their lives. Let us also never forget the love of our community and those with whom we share it. At the end of the day, it is those relationships that will sustain us. 

For every pharmacist. For all of pharmacy. 

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Posted: Sep 10, 2024

Remembering the day that changed our world

I remember September 11th, 2001, as if it were yesterday. I was working as a relief pharmacist in Morgan City, Alabama, when my wife called to tell me there had been an airplane crash in New York.

Posted: Sep 3, 2024

Pharmacists: We must accelerate billing for services

For all my 32 years in the profession, pharmacists have been asking for the right to bill third-party payers, namely major medical insurance companies, (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial) for their care services. We’ve had fits and starts, and in some states the uptake has been good because in large part the state pharmacy association has done tremendous work to make the processes of becoming an in-network provider easy to understand and navigate.

Guest Spotlights

Thought Leadership & Contributions from Industry Experts

Posted: Oct 29, 2024

Recent pharmacy closures and ECAPS legislation

Like so many of you, we’ve been continuing to follow reports in the media about pharmacy closures. It seems like each of those stories focuses on the obvious downside to the closures—a local place to get prescriptions filled is going away.

Posted: Sep 10, 2024

Remembering the day that changed our world

I remember September 11th, 2001, as if it were yesterday. I was working as a relief pharmacist in Morgan City, Alabama, when my wife called to tell me there had been an airplane crash in New York.

Posted: Sep 3, 2024

Pharmacists: We must accelerate billing for services

For all my 32 years in the profession, pharmacists have been asking for the right to bill third-party payers, namely major medical insurance companies, (e.g., Medicare, Medicaid, and commercial) for their care services. We’ve had fits and starts, and in some states the uptake has been good because in large part the state pharmacy association has done tremendous work to make the processes of becoming an in-network provider easy to understand and navigate.

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