Pubdate: Mon, 19 Apr 1999 Source: Sydney Morning Herald (Australia) Contact: http://www.smh.com.au/ Author: Marion Downey, Health Writer WOOLWORTHS CONSIDERS PLAN FOR DRUG, NEEDLE DISPENSARIES Prescription drugs including methadone, naltrexone and narcotics, and needles for heroin addicts may soon be available from Woolworths stores under a plan being considered by the supermarket chain. Under the scheme, Woolworths would rent space in its stores to pharmacists. More than 50 pharmacists are believed to have been approached to move their shops into the supermarket and negotiations are well under way with a Mona Vale chemist, Mr Warwick Plunkett, who may be the first to move into his local Woolies. But the NSW Pharmacy Guild said yesterday it would advise members against renting space because it believed Woolworths would exert subtle pressure on chemists to restrict services and it was "inappropriate" to dispense medicines next to beer and cigarettes. Chemists located in and owned by supermarkets are common in America and England. But Woolworths has dropped plans to own chemists outright because this would have required a change in the law and was strongly opposed by pharmacy organisations. By law, chemists, not their landlords, have the final say over what products are sold in pharmacies, so Woolworths would have no legal authority to block the dispensing of controversial drugs or the operation of a needle exchange program. Woolworth's chief executive officer, Mr Roger Corbett, told a recent meeting of pharmacists in Sydney and reported in this month's NSW Pharmacy Guild Bulletin that "methadone people were customers and that they are entitled to a service, providing the process is properly managed". Mr Corbett told the Herald the comments were made strictly to pharmacists. Mr Plunkett, who has been negotiating with Woolworths since last year, said he was "commercially vulnerable" to Woolworths renting space to another pharmacist in the store. "Currently, I have a pharmacy that operates 50 metres from their front door," he said. "For me to be inside their front door and have 27,000 people walking past my front door currently would appear to be a significant opportunity." Although not part of the methadone program, Mr Plunkett said he was part of the needle exchange program and dispensed dangerous "Schedule 8" drugs, including narcotics. Mr Corbett told the Herald Woolworths was talking to a number of pharmacies about setting up shop within the store. A Council of Australian Governments review is looking at the law on ownership of chemists which prevents non-registered pharmacists from owning chemist shops. Woolworths has dropped plans to press for a change in the law on pharmacy ownerships. "If and when we decide to put pharmacies in our stores we will do so in partnership with pharmacies," he said. The registrar of the Pharmacy Board of NSW, Mr Ian Dean, said Woolworths would be within the law provided the chemist had a separate entrance to the street. But it could also have an entrance directly into Woolworths. Mr Dean said it was the business of pharmacists to decide what service to provide. Mr Dean said Woolworths "would not dare" to tell a pharmacist renting space whether the shop could operate a needle exchange. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake