02/20/2026
I walked into an independent pharmacy today not because it was trendy, not because it had a flashy app, but because it was there.
Before I even made it to the counter, someone looked up and said my name. Not because I scanned a QR code. Because they knew me.
They asked how I was doing and then paused long enough to actually hear the answer.
Behind the counter wasn’t a script or a call center three states away. It was a pharmacist who knew my history, my meds, my allergies, and the fact that the last time I was in, I wasn’t doing so great. They remembered. And that mattered more than any coupon ever could.
They caught a dosing issue before it became a problem. They explained a side effect I may experience. They asked if I could afford the medication and when I hesitated, they quietly worked to find a solution without making me feel small.
No algorithm did that.
No insurance company approved that moment.
No big data model predicted that care.
Big insurances and the PBMs they own can’t see this.
They don’t see the pharmacist who stays late to make sure an elderly patient doesn’t miss a dose.
They don’t see the staff who hand-deliver meds during heat waves, storms, or pandemics.
They don’t see the quiet counseling at the counter when someone is scared, sick, or running out of hope.
And major news media rarely shows it because it doesn’t fit into a headline about profits, mergers, or quarterly earnings.
But this is healthcare.
Independent pharmacies are not relics of the past. They are frontline healthcare access points. They are safety nets. They are trust, built one patient at a time.
When systems fail, these pharmacies don’t disappear.
They unlock the door.
They answer the phone.
They show up.
If you want to understand what healthcare should look like in America, don’t start with an insurance executive or a corporate press release or your PBM steering you to the mail order pharmacy they own.
Start by visiting an independent pharmacy and a human being who knows your name.