Health and Personal Care Suppliers and Pharmacists need to Diversify Pharmacy Businesses

By: PRLog
PRLog - Apr. 23, 2014 - KIDDERMINSTER, U.K. -- With nearly 70 percent of turnover tied into price regulated prescription business there are good reasons for health and beauty suppliers and pharmacists to work together to help diversify pharmacy sales in Europe into non-pharmaceutical health and personal care related categories and OTC self-medication.

The average pharmacy in Europe has a sales turnover of €1.158 million  of which 69 percent of is based on dispensing prescriptions which are largely reimbursed and hence price regulated.  OTC self-medication  represents around 12 percent of turnover, while parapharmacy, medical aids and other health and beauty categories make up nearly a fifth of pharmacy sales. So says a major new  market report covering over 208,750 pharmacies in 22 European countries by one of Europe’s leading consumer healthcare marketing experts,  James Dudley.

The report “OTC Distribution in Europe the 2014 edition” was published in the spring of 2014 by James Dudley Management and is the ninth edition of an important consumer healthcare industry study running since 1992.

Pharmaceutical dispensing of prescription drugs represent 80 percent and more of pharmacy sales turnover in three of Europe’s largest pharmacy markets France, Germany and Spain along with the Netherlands. The price regulated nature of prescription business together with Government control of dispensing fees limits the maximisation of profitability and this is certainly the case in Germany where a third of pharmacies complain that their future viability is threatened.

While this level of commercial dependency on prescription business is probably acceptable in Slovenia where the majority of pharmacies are Stateowned, diversification into non-price regulated categories is probably needed in advanced capitalist economies for businesses to thrive and grow.

In Europe’s largest pharmaceutical market, Germany the share of turnover represented by pharmacy only OTC medicines for example is down to less than 8 percent. This represents a worrying downward trend and is considerably lower than the 12.9 percent of turnover achieved in 2005. While this fall in share is partially due to competition from ‘free sale’ medicines through druggist channels, internet and mail order pharmacy represents some 12 percent of OTC self-medication market share in Germany according to the Dudley report.

In France, the average pharmacy has a turnover of €1.94 million. Pharmacy retailers are highly dependent on prescriptions as these represent about 82 percent of pharmacy turnover. 7 percent of retail pharmacy turnover stems from OTC medicine sales and 5 percent from cosmetics and personal care. A further 2 percent of turnover stems from other parapharmacy items and companion animal health products.

By contrast less than two thirds of pharmacy turnover is represented by business dependent on State reimbursement in Switzerland, Romania and Norway. In each of these pharmacy retail markets non-pharmacy lines especially beauty and personal care represent between a fifth and a quarter of pharmacy sales.

In Poland prescription only medicines represent some 63 percent of pharmacy turnover. However, this is split 45 percent for reimbursed medicines and 18 percent for prescription medicines which are not reimbursed. OTC medicines represent about a quarter of pharmacy turnover in Poland.

"Many pharmacies are deterred from diversification because of competition from mass market outlets in terms of high penetration brands, low prices, wide ranges and shopping convenience. However, pharmacies can exploit their position as healthcare service providers to take shares of personal care categories with clear health benefits and where pharmacist advice makes their service unique",says James Dudley author of the report.

For example the main channels for general cosmetics in Poland are chains of cosmetic shops which have 41 percent market share, these are followed by hypermarkets with 15 percent share. Pharmacies have a small share of the Polish cosmetic market but own the specialized niche of dermo-cosmetics which represent some 4 percent of pharmacy turnover. Sales of dermo-cosmetics have grown rapidly in recent years in Polish pharmacies and are favoured by pharmacists for the high margins they generate.

Prescription medicines and National Health Service contracts represent just 50 percent of drugstore turnover in the United Kingdom. This figure is however highly skewed by Britain’s largest pharmacy chain Boots the Chemist which represents a fifth of pharmacy turnover in the United Kingdom. Only 35.6 percent of Boots the Chemist turnover is derived from dispensing and related income. Retail sales account for 64.4 percent of store turnover of which over half is for beauty and toiletry products.

While pharmacies in Romania try to avoid direct competition with supermarkets they have grabbed niche segments in categories such as hygiene and personal care, which are at the upper end of the mass market or are premium priced. These they differentiate through the emphasis on the products' healthcare attributes.

Sales of non-medicinal products are important especially for Romanian pharmacy chains as they provide many times the gross margin of pharmaceuticals. For example in Sensiblu, Romania’s largest drugstore chain, cosmetics and dermo-cosmetics account for 20 percent of the sales.

Another healthcare market where pharmacies have achieved a significant share of non-pharmaceutical consumer health and beauty categories is Bulgaria. Medicines account for some 60 percent of turnover of the average pharmacy. This is split 44 percent for prescription medicines and 16 percent OTC self-medication. Baby food and nutrition represent about a fifth of sales while cosmetics take 10 percent. There is also a variety of other products which include medical supplies including bandages, hygiene and sanitary products according to Dudley’s OTC Distribution in Europe report.

Ends

For further information about OTC Distribution in Europe 2012 edition contact James Dudley Management ++44(0) 1562 747705 e-mail information@james-dudley.co.uk or visit website http://www.james-dudley.co.uk/

Note for Editors

‘OTC Distribution in Europe - the 2014 edition – Meeting the New Challenges covers 22 countries in Europe and is written by the acknowledged industry expert James Dudley and published in Spring 2014.  The report covers: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Finland, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain,  Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine and the United Kingdom.  For Further Information go to http://www.james-dudley.co.uk/

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