HAMBURG, Germany ā If youāre looking for bobby pins, cheap lipstick or a protein bar, well, sorry, Americans, the German pharmacy canāt help you.
Itās not the CVS, Rite Aid or Walgreens of home. Die Apotheke, as a pharmacy is known here, sells medications. German drugstores might have some high-end makeup (hypoallergenic, and for sensitive skin!), lotions or baby bottles. Youāll also definitely find magnesium supplements and vitamins.
But they arenāt convenience stores stocking hair dryers, cellphone chargers, toys or groceries. This is the place you go for health, and for medicine.
Germanyās health care system, with its negotiated low drug prices and robust universal insurance program, is hailed as a forward-looking model for the United States, which is hamstrung by ever-growing health care costs and leaves millions of people uninsured. Could we learn something from the pharmacies here, too?
Carrying that question in mind, I wandered into three north Hamburg pharmacies, all within a five- to 15-minute walk of one another.
It turns out this is where the health landscape gets a little fuzzy. The pharmacies here offer a glimpse into how Germanyās drug pricing system, for the most part, keeps drugs relatively affordable for consumers. But while Apothekes present themselves as health-oriented hubs, they, like so much else in health care, are first and foremost businesses.


Unlike in the United States, or even other European countries, German pharmacies must be owned by pharmacists. Most medications are prescription-based. And every purchase of medication ā even something Americans consider āover-the-counterā like ibuprofen or cold medicine ā requires a conversation with the pharmacist first, to make sure patients understand its effects.
Economists here arenāt sure the German way is better.
For starters, thereās no evidence that this specific requirement of a ātalkā is somehow more efficient or leads to better health outcomes. While expert opinion is in some cases helpful, it can be superfluous, too. For instance, does someone with menstrual cramps or a muscle sprain need the pharmacistās advice before getting ibuprofen?
āThe benefits are meant to be safety,ā said Tom Stargardt, a professor at the University of Hamburg who studies pharmaceutical economics. āThe question is, āHow much do you trust the consumer to be informed, to be able to judge the benefits of the drug?āā

Often, those conversations are quick and cursory. At La Vie Apotheke, on a crisp Friday morning, a pharmacy consultation for aspirin took about half a minute.
German pharmacists have a strict monopoly on dispensing medicine, and that undermines the potential for price competition, economists said.
Also, drugs here have a set price. A government-backed panel defines what public insurance plans will pay. Then, wholesalers can add a markup, defined by statute. Pharmacists can add one more, also legally prescribed. Thatās it.
Itās a window into the ethos of the national health care system. āEvery prescription drug costs the same in every pharmacy,ā Stargardt said. āThe reason is that every person should have the same access. Whether they live in a rural area [or a city], they shouldnāt be punished in terms of prices.ā
Drugs here already cost less than in the United States. For instance, Humalog, a brand of insulin, lists a $55 price per vial, compared with an average of hundreds of dollars back home.
And German patients typically donāt even see that expense. If a doctor prescribed the drug, insurance typically must cover it, meaning patients pay virtually nothing. (When a cheaper generic is available here, pharmacists are legally required to provide that version, unless the physician explicitly says otherwise.) For insured Germans with chronic illnesses, the state caps health cost sharing at 2% of their household income.

There are exceptions. One thatās in striking contrast to American health policy: Insurers arenāt required to cover birth control pills for women older than 22. Pharmacists said that expense can run up to 60 euros per month ā about $67 U.S. dollars ā depending on the brand a woman gets. Under the Affordable Care Act, American insurance plans must cover contraception as a form of preventive medicine, with no cost sharing.
And, pharmacists and economists alike will acknowledge, even with the health halo effect German pharmacies enjoy, die Apotheke and the Walgreens have a common motivation.
At Lillen Apotheke, in Hamburgās upscale Eppendorf neighborhood, a pharmacist acknowledged that stores like hers sell skin lotion, high-end nail polish (allegedly better for your fingers) or pharmacy-exclusive mascara (also hypoallergenic) not primarily for health reasons ā but rather, to drive profits.
Take the lozenges for sale. Theyāre sandwiched between licorice candies (of which sugar is the first ingredient) and fruit gummies made specially for pharmacies, which claim to have natural vitamins, too. And, of course, these are positioned next to the chocolate.
Whatās the health value there?
āOh. Thatās just for fun,ā the pharmacist said.
Shefali Luthra is currently reporting from Germany as a 2019 Arthur F. Burns Fellow. The fellowship is an exchange program for German, American and Canadian journalists operated by the and the .
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