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Free prescription medication service sees jump in working clients

Tom Deja and Carol Foltz prepare prescriptions at Faith Community Pharmacy in Newport, on its first day open, June 6, 2022. The pharmacy, which started in 2002, just moved from Florence to this space that will allow it room to grow.

NEWPORT, Ky. – Kellee Yelton was a receptionist at a medical office in Norwood and had health insurance in January 2020 when she took short-term disability to get surgery on her foot. 

"Then the pandemic hit," she says.

Four months into it Yelton of Northern Kentucky lost her job. She had to move in with her sister. And she could no longer afford essential prescription medications for diabetes and hypertension.

"I tried to get through to unemployment and I just couldn't," said Yelton, now a Southgate resident. "I never was able."

A doctor told her about Faith Community Pharmacy, a nonprofit that for 20 years has provided free prescription medications to Northern Kentucky residents who cannot afford them.

Kellee Yelton has been receiving medications for diabetes and hypertension from Faith Community Pharmacy since she lost her job during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Here, she's in her Southgate home. She works now but still needs assistance.

Yelton's situation is typical among the newest clients of Faith Community Pharmacy: They are less often retirees. They are people who lost jobs during the pandemic. Sometimes, they're people who got back to work but have no insurance or a premium so high that they can't afford prescription medications. They are people who are now making choices between food and gas, medical costs and utilities, because they cannot keep up with inflation.

This is the new face of need for free prescription medication, said Aaron Broomall, Faith Community Pharmacy's executive director.

The jump in these clients, coupled with the more traditional clients – seniors living on Social Security checks – is why the service moved this month from a Florence office to a new location: Watertower Square at 601 Washington Ave. in Newport. 

Hayley Jansen, right, helps Tom Deja move in cabinets that will house medication at Faith Community Pharmacy in Newport on June 1. The pharmacy's move from Florence is to accommodate a growing need for free prescription medications in Northern Kentucky.

Move to Newport brings free pharmacy closer to new clients

The workers were there on a Wednesday morning, moving shelving into a space that is more than three times the size of the operation's previous pharmacy, in Florence. They moved in printers and chairs and counters and more preparing for the June 6 opening.

The location couldn't be better for the service, Broomall said. Watertower Square is hub of services. The visibility will bring Faith Community Pharmacy even more clients, Broomall predicted. The new location is on a bus line – helpful to people with limited transportation options or gas money, and it's in the urban core of Northern Kentucky, where many of the pharmacy's clients live.

To bring the service to more people, the organization plans to increase outreach at churches, schools, clinics and emergency and urgent care departments. For rural clients, another growing group of enrollees, Broomall said, "We'll deliver their prescriptions."

Carol Foltz prepares prescriptions at Faith Community Pharmacy in Newport on June 6, 2022.

Medication costs hurt Americans during pandemic

What this free pharmacy is seeing is a slice of what's happened in America since the pandemic started.

A GoodRx survey released in March 2021 shows that one in three Americans saw their out-of-pocket medication costs go up in 2020. Nearly 40% reported difficulty affording their prescription medications, and more than 20% said they struggled to pay for basic needs, such as food and shelter, as a result.


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