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Chapter 19: CVS: “Fired Up” about Social Responsibility: 19-1 Introduction Book Title: Business Ethics: Ethical Decision Making and Cases Printed By: Kennisha Holloman (kholloman@grantham.edu) © 2019 Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning

19-1 Introduction

In 1963 brothers Stanley and Sidney Goldstein founded the first Consumer Value Store

(CVS) with partner Ralph Hoagland in Lowell, Massachusetts. The store originally sold

health and beauty supplies. It was widely successful and grew to include 17 stores in one

year. By 1967 CVS began offering in-store pharmacy departments, and in less than a

decade it was acquired by the retail holding corporation Melville Corporation. This marked

the beginning of CVS’s expansion across the East Coast through new store openings or

mergers and acquisitions. It soon reached the milestone of exceeding $100 million in sales

in 1974.

As the company grew, it faced intense competition, which it responded to through a

differentiation strategy. CVS focused on its core offerings of health and beauty products,

placing stores in shopping malls to generate more foot traffic. This strategy worked well for

the company, allowing it to hit $1 billion in sales by 1985. The company celebrated its 25th

year in 1988 with 750 stores and $1.6 billion in sales. The acquisition of Peoples Drug

stores enabled CVS to establish its presence more widely along the coast and spurred the

launch of PharmaCare, a pharmacy benefit management (PBM) company providing

services to employers and insurers. PBM aids employers in managing health care benefit

plans and processes prescriptions. Because they are so big, PBMs also have strong

negotiating power with drug companies. In 1996 the Melville Corporation restructured, and

CVS became independent as a publicly traded company on the New York Stock Exchange.

This new surge of investment allowed the company to expand widely across the nation into

the Midwest and Southeast. CVS’s acquisition of 2,500 Revco stores became the largest

acquisition in U.S. retail pharmacy history. With the rise of the Internet, CVS seized upon the

opportunity to launch CVS.com in 1999 (and Caremark.com after the 2007 acquisition). This

became the first fully integrated online pharmacy in the United States. In another first for the

U.S. pharmacy retail industry, the company introduced the ExtraCare Card loyalty program

in 2001. The company’s 40th anniversary in 2003 was marked with increasing westward

expansion, 44 million loyalty card holders, and more than 4,000 stores in approximately 30

states. In the following five years, the company’s acquisitions allowed CVS to gain

leadership in key markets, begin a mail order business, and open its 7,000th retail location.

The company would later be rebranded as CVS Health.

The two most important acquisitions in the history of CVS include MinuteClinic walk-in

health clinics (in 2005) and Caremark Rx, Inc. (in 2007), a pharmacy benefits management

company. To date, MinuteClinic has facilitated over 34 million patient visits in more than

1,100 clinics across 33 states. CVS became the largest pharmacy in the United States

(although it vies with Walgreens to maintain this title) and began introducing new services

such as online prescription refills. The company makes more than $153 billion in revenue

and has over 9,700 pharmacies, 1,100 MinuteClinics, 68,000 retail network pharmacies, 35

specialty retail pharmacies, and a pharmacy benefit management business. It estimates that

it serves five million customers daily.

CVS sells products that meet the highest quality standards as well as its own line of

products whose specifications and performance are annually tested and reviewed to ensure

compliance with applicable consumer safety laws. In addition, the company has instituted a

Cosmetic Safety Policy that applies to all of the cosmetic products it sells. CVS employs

250,000 people in over 9,700 locations across 49 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto

Rico, Brazil, and Northern Ireland. Corporate headquarters are located in Woonsocket,

Rhode Island. In one year CVS fills and manages 1.9 billion prescriptions, provides services

to 90 million PBM members, and earns $40 billion in specialty drug revenue. The company

is proud to note its seventh spot on the Fortune 500 list. Today, CVS is the largest pharmacy

health care provider and pharmacy in the United States and is composed of four business

functions: CVS Pharmacy, CVS Caremark, CVS MinuteClinic, and CVS Specialty.

The following case will explain some of the legal and ethical challenges CVS has

encountered, including a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and U.S.

Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) regarding violations of the Health Insurance

Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) Privacy Rule, deceptive business practices, and

unseemly conduct by a manager resulting in a death. Our examination will also include how

CVS responded to such allegations and how it has worked to redefine the company as a

health care provider. We will analyze the company’s ethical structure, including its decision

to stop selling cigarettes, as well as provide an overview of some criticisms the company

has received during its transition. The conclusion offers some insights into the future

challenges CVS will likely experience.

Chapter 19: CVS: “Fired Up” about Social Responsibility: 19-1 Introduction Book Title: Business Ethics: Ethical Decision Making and Cases Printed By: Kennisha Holloman (kholloman@grantham.edu) © 2019 Cengage Learning, Cengage Learning

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