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Swine Flu Thrusts Retail Health Initiatives into the Spotlight

By Mike Duff | May 5, 2009

Swine flu fears will put retailers who have been expanding health services on the front lines for prevention and treatment, providing their initiatives with new recognition.

Headlines might focus on swine flu’s global advance, but retailers will get the credit where it counts, locally. For example, in Michigan, the Kent County Health Department is working with supercenter operator Meijer and two local supermarket chains, Family Fare and D&W, both affiliated with the Spartan Stores wholesaler, to provide the antiviral drugs Tamiflu and Relenza to combat the swine, or H1N1, flu if the illness become widespread in the area. Both Meijer and Spartan are headquartered in Grand Rapids, Kent County’s capital, and have lots of stores in the vicinity.

Meijer and the Spartan-affiliated supermarkets will work with the Kent County health department to help distribute several thousand courses of the drugs free of charge to anyone with a doctor’s prescription. Meijer already provides free antibiotics and prenatal vitamins, and its activities in the flu scare can only reinforce its position as an important health care institution in the community.

Of course, Meijer and Spartan aren’t the only retailers who are responding to concerns. CVS is among the retailers who have posted health alerts on their home pages that include information about how to avoid swine flu. CVS also provides instructions about how to get tested for flu at one of its MinuteClinic community treatment centers. Test results are available in minutes, and MinuteClinic practitioners can initiate antiviral treatments immediately.

Walgreens, as part of its efforts to address consumer concerns, also has swine flu information on its home page and references the company’s Take Care Clinics, offering that its own health care providers can diagnose and treat flu. The other major drug store chain, RiteAid, provides phone and Internet connections to its pharmacists who can assess symptoms and suggest which folks might want to see a doctor for an antiviral prescription.

Among its initiatives regarding flu, Wal-Mart also has been posting informational alerts on its web site, providing worried customers with a way to learn more about the potential threat and to deal with it. Kroger’s web site includes the reminder that consumers can’t get swine flu from eating pork, and it’s hard to blame the supermarket operator for letting folks know that they can still consume a perishable commodity it has in large supply. Even dollar stores, which don’t operate pharmacies, are getting into the act, with 99 Cents Only promoting itself as an inexpensive destination for face masks, antibacterial wipes, sanitizers, bandages, alcohol, even water, flashlights, batteries and canned foods, just in case the flu turns out to be a lot worse than appears likely.

As they continue to get more involved with health care, retailers will become increasingly important actors in dealing with health threats and even more deeply integrated into the lives of their customers.

Mike Duff has written about retail and related fields over 20 years. His work has appeared in publications as diverse as Retailing Today, Drug Store News, Supermarket Business, Consumer Digest, MarketingWeek, American Food and Ag Exporter magazines.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Google Tries To Save You From Swine Flu

    WebProNews - 13 days 12 hours 29 minutes ago

    The media frenzy over swine flu may have died down a little since earlier this year; it's no longer a top headline on every other news site, at least.  But people remain extremely concerned about it (anyone care to guess how many tons of hand sanitizer have been sold?), and Google's trying to help out by pointing them towards flu shots.A post...

  • Health Department urges vaccination

    ABC - 29 days 3 hours 14 minutes ago

    Posted Only four per cent of West Australians eligible for swine flu vaccination have had the shot. (ABC News) The Health Department is urging all West Australians to get the swine flu vaccine to prevent a pandemic next year. Fewer than four per cent of people who are eligible for the vaccine, or 65 thousand people, have been immunised. The...

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    South China Morning Post - 192 days 10 hours 56 minutes ago

    Schools across the mainland will conduct health checks on students every morning as Beijing steps up measures to prevent swine flu from taking root. Teachers had to inform their local education departments within two hours of detecting cases of flu, the Ministry of Education said

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    Sky News - 206 days 19 hours ago

    The Mexican government says the swine flu epidemic in Mexico is not as aggressive as initially feared. The government has confirmed a toll of 15 dead and just under 330 people infected, based on lab tests. Health Minister Jose Angel Cordova has told a news conference the swine flu virus is not as aggressive as avian flu, which has a mortality...

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