Here's a company with a relentless focus on the consumer, and has held this core belief since its inception: Amazon.
Amazon, the company which has devoted every piece of capital in the name of its customers, the company which generates $630B+ in annual revenue and is worth over $2 trillion in market cap with a 65% return over the past 5 years (not market beating, to be fair), is slowly working its way deeper into the healthcare services industry.
Since acquiring PillPack in 2018 and launching Amazon Pharmacy in 2020, Amazon has emphasized affordability and transparency in pharmacy practices, initially targeting those paying cash, then moving into Medicare and directly competing with CVS' retail pharmacy on both fronts. For Amazon, the end goal is always the consumer with an endless pursuit of making things easier for Amazon customers - even in healthcare, where incumbents don't play nice.
Amazon bought PillPack to be a consumer healthcare platform play, and they've been building it that way ever since, launching transparent products like RxPass and overpaying for acquiring consumer-forward companies like One Medical:
- "[Amazon's Nader] Kabbani shared [TJ] Parker's concern about the pharmacy industry and the dominant players' inability or unwillingness to put the consumer first."
So, Amazon Pharmacy is reshaping the healthcare landscape by leveraging its unique strengths in digital consumer experience, logistics, and technology-enabled simplification. I talked to Amazon Pharmacy's John Love last week who was a wealth of information on what they've been up to, including PillPack's move into Medicare and also around enabling caregivers to support loved ones by allowing them to manage medication.
Today Amazon is working receive access to PBM APIs so that members can access their benefits and know their price estimates. Notably, despite efforts to integrate directly with pharmacy benefit managers (PBMs) to streamline copay estimates and claims, the largest three PBMs have yet to fully partner with Amazon, signaling ongoing resistance and complexities in data-sharing and transparency. Let's just assume they're worried about…API security.
Amazon has asked the PBMs for this access and all 3 of the big PBMs have "understood the request."
Currently, Amazon Pharmacy serves approximately 1 in 4 customers through real-time benefit checks. Where they don't have perfect information, the platform analyzes past claims data and other information to copays, leveraging machine learning to do so. Fascinatingly, simply by ESTIMATING copays for customers, Amazon learned they could improve medication adherence. Explain to me exactly why PBMs would be against that? (But really, if there's a legitimate reason I'd love to know).
Amazon Pharmacy's new offerings, PrimeRx, RxPass, and RxCoupon, illustrate Amazon's consumer-centric approach across healthcare which has a simple goal: simplify, simplify, simplify. The team continues to recognize broken or failing aspects of the pharmacy value chain for the consumer. Quality of experience at the retail pharmacy is dismal. Mail order hasn't evolved. So they set out a goal to get every U.S. citizen medication as quickly as possible, safely.
To that end, Amazon Pharmacy is scaling rapidly in logistical capabilities, integrating pharmacies directly into its vast logistical network to enable same-day medication delivery. By embedding pharmacies within distribution hubs, they've reduced delivery times from 2 days to 2-6 hours, launching services initially in urban hubs such as Seattle, New York, and Austin, with plans to build a new pharmacy operation every 18 days into major urban areas over the course of 2025.
I'm also pumped personally to hear the state of Texas approved drone delivery, which should only serve to increase medication access. But I'd love to eventually see these capabilities extend to rural areas.
In tandem with its logistical growth, Amazon continues to expand its pharmacy business through strategic partnerships, including a notable agreement with Eli Lilly as a dispensing partner and Blue Cross of California. Additionally, Amazon's latest feature enhancements, like caregiver functionalities and Medicare-compatible payment options, directly respond to growing consumer demands for convenience, affordability, and transparency. When asking John how Amazon's team prioritizes platform features, he noted they develop a composite score, involving the following questions and more:
- What's the total potential impact of this feature?
- How can we improve medication adherence, access, and affordability? What are the edge cases?
- How much time is the consumer saving?
Amazon's broader ambition remains clear: to fundamentally transform the consumer healthcare experience. With significant logistical strengths, Amazon Pharmacy seeks to remove administrative burdens - automating data entry, streamlining billing processes, and reducing pharmacy deserts.
- "We want the pharmacy to be as simple as shopping on Amazon is…make what should be simple…simple."
In essence, Amazon Pharmacy's expansion and innovative approach underline healthcare's shift towards consumerism, and despite ongoing friction with major PBMs, the trajectory suggests continued disruption as Amazon leverages its considerable technological and logistical resources to reshape the patient pharmacy experience.
And it looks like incumbents are taking notice as consumers demand more from their healthcare services.
- "[Customers] really want to trust and engage with companies that have earned the right to be in healthcare," [now-former CEO Karen Lynch] said. "I think about Amazon as sort of a transactional company today." - late 2022 conference
- "We welcome competition." - now-CEO David Joyner, Fortune op-ed April 2024
I do want to reiterate - this isn't intended to be a CVS slam piece or an Amazon puff piece. It's intended to be a …"who is making the consumer experience in healthcare better?" piece. And so far, it seems as if Amazon is doing a hell of a better job, but CVS has the immense incumbency and assets to deliver incredible impact.
Who do you trust more to ship for consumers in healthcare - Amazon, CVS, or neither?
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