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Corporate Vampires Suck Campaign Targets CVS Pharmacy

Author: AIDS Healthcare Foundation
Published: 2021/07/11 - Updated: 2026/02/27
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Informative
Category Topic: Americas - Related Publications

Contents: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates

Synopsis: This report covers the AIDS Healthcare Foundation's (AHF) nationwide advocacy campaign against CVS, titled "Corporate Vampires Suck," which calls attention to CVS's anti-competitive business practices and their damaging effects on HIV and AIDS patients as well as independent pharmacies. The peer-reviewed publication details how CVS forces health plan members - including those with serious chronic conditions - to obtain medications through mail order or drop shipment, cutting them off from the specialty pharmacy services and long-standing care relationships they depend on. It also covers the related U.S. Supreme Court class action case brought by HIV patients alleging that CVS Caremark's mail-order policies are discriminatory under the Affordable Care Act. This is particularly relevant to people with disabilities and chronic illnesses who rely on personalized pharmacy care and face real harm when corporate consolidation limits their healthcare choices - Disabled World (DW).

Definition: Anti-competitive Behavior in the Pharmacy Industry

Anti-competitive behavior in the pharmacy industry refers to business practices by large corporations - such as acquiring health insurance providers and then mandating that plan members use only company-owned pharmacy services - that restrict consumer choice, undermine independent pharmacies, and consolidate market power in ways that can directly harm patient care. In the healthcare context, these practices are especially concerning because they can sever long-standing relationships between patients and their pharmacists, force individuals with complex medical needs to receive medications through impersonal mail-order channels, and eliminate the specialized, face-to-face support that people managing chronic and life-threatening conditions often require.

Introduction

Corporate Vampires Suck Ad Campaign

AIDS care provider's advocacy campaign targets corporate behemoth CVS for its anti-competitive behavior, notably, buying up health plans like Aetna, and then forcing patients - including HIV patients, who often rely on specialty services from their pharmacists - to obtain their lifesaving medications by mail order or drop shipment.

In response to the growing consolidation and increasingly monopolistic behavior in the pharmacy and health care industries, AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) is launching a new advocacy campaign to take on health and pharmacy giant CVS, the sixth largest corporation in the world over its anti-competitive business model which squeezes many independent and mom-and-pop pharmacies, some to the point of forcing their closure.

Main Content

The campaign, 'CVS: Corporate Vampires Suck' targets CVS over its fierce anti-competitive behavior, specifically regarding its refusal to allow patients any choice in their pharmacy services. CVS's currently forces most of its health plan patients from providers like Aetna - which CVS purchased for $69 billion in cash and stock in 2018 - to obtain their lifesaving medications by mail order or drop shipment.

However, given the nature of their disease, HIV/AIDS patients often rely on the specialty services, years-long-relationships, and expertise of their pharmacists, often viewing them as reliable partners in their care. With 35 years of experience in the health care field, AHF currently provides clinical care and other services to HIV/AIDS patients at 72 health care centers across the U.S. and Puerto Rico. It also operates a chain of 62 AHF Pharmacy outlets in 14 states, Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico.

"CVS is a major threat to public health. While it began as 'Consumer Value Stores' back in the 1960s, those days are gone: CVS metastasized into a sharp-elbowed corporate behemoth buying up health plans for billions and forcing clients - including HIV/AIDS patients - to use their mail order services, harming patients and fragmenting their care in the process," said Michael Weinstein president of AHF.

"Patients are suffering AND small pharmacies are being squeezed and put out of business. That's why we put some real teeth into this new advocacy campaign targeting CVS - we need the public's help to fight back against these 'corporate vampires.'"

CVS: Corporate Vampires Suck Campaign

The 'CVS: Corporate Vampires Suck' campaign kicks off in full force this week, with a full-page, full-color ad running in as many as five daily and weekly newspapers across the country with most landing Sunday, July 11. The ad also ran in the weekly Houston Defender Thursday, July 8. The Sunday papers include the Ft. Lauderdale Sun Sentinel, Houston Chronicle, and the Chicago Defender (online, next week) and will also appear sometime next week in Rhode Island's Providence Journal. CVS is headquartered in nearby Woonsocket, RI. The ads will be complemented by a radio campaign, social media and a legislative call-to-action urging viewers and readers to contact their legislators asking them to help fight back against CVS's monopolistic and anti-competitive behavior.

"Large health care insurance companies and national pharmacy chains distort the market by locking out competing independent retail and specialty pharmacies like AHF's. This disrupts patient care and interferes with patient choice," added Scott Carruthers, chief of pharmacy and senior manager for AHF. "Our new campaign shines a light on these abuses by one particularly egregious offender - CVS - and calls for reform."

Corporate Vampires Suck Ad
Corporate Vampires Suck Ad reads - CVS is draining the life out of small pharmacies. CVS is a threat to public health. They're buying up health plans and forcing clients to use their services, harming patients and fragmenting their care in the process. Patients are being cut off from the vital, specialty services they need AND small pharmacies are being put out of business. CVS is the 6th largest corporation in the world. That's why we need your help to fight back against these corporate vampires.

Supreme Court Agrees to Hear Related Lawsuit by HIV Patients Over Pharmacy Choice

In a related, but uncoordinated action last week, the Supreme Court of the United States agreed to take up a class action suit filed by HIV patients who claim that CVS Caremark's policy requiring them to obtain medications via mail or drop shipment is discriminatory under the Affordable Care Act. According to Politico Pro (Susannah Luthi, July 2,2021) the court will consider antidiscrimination protections when it

"...consider(s) whether the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and by extension the Affordable Care Act, allows a 'disparate impact' claim from plaintiffs alleging disability discrimination. In a class action suit, HIV patients claimed CVS Caremark's policy requiring them to obtain medications by mail order or drop shipment is discriminatory."

Politico Pro also noted the Supreme Court is likely to hold oral arguments in the fall.

In December 2020, AHF welcomed a lower court ruling in the CVS case that now goes before the Supreme Court. AHF publicly applauded a ruling issued December 9, 2020, from the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals that people living with HIV can state a discrimination claim under the U.S. Affordable Care Act against CVS for requiring them to have only designated specialty pharmacies as part of in-network pharmacy services for private insurance plans. See Doe vs. CVS Pharmacy, Inc.

In 2018, AHF also warned the U.S. Department of Justice that the then proposed CVS merger with Aetna would create a monopoly-like behemoth that would harm patients, which appears to be the case.

AHF's 'CVS: Corporate Vampires Suck' campaign launches this week and will run until September.

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF)

AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization, currently provides medical care and/or services to over 1.5 million individuals in 45 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe.

Insights, Analysis, and Developments

Editorial Note: The collision between corporate pharmacy consolidation and patient welfare is not an abstract policy debate - it plays out daily in the lives of people living with HIV and AIDS who depend on trusted pharmacists for far more than filling prescriptions. AHF's "Corporate Vampires Suck" campaign, combined with the Supreme Court's decision to hear a related discrimination case under the Affordable Care Act, signals a turning point in the fight over pharmacy choice. Whether through public pressure or legal remedy, the outcome of these efforts could reshape how large pharmacy corporations are allowed to restrict patient access and squeeze out smaller competitors that serve vulnerable communities - Disabled World (DW).

Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by AIDS Healthcare Foundation and published on 2021/07/11, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.

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APA: AIDS Healthcare Foundation. (2021, July 11 - Last revised: 2026, February 27). Corporate Vampires Suck Campaign Targets CVS Pharmacy. Disabled World (DW). Retrieved March 6, 2026 from www.disabled-world.com/news/america/vampires-suck-ads.php
MLA: AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "Corporate Vampires Suck Campaign Targets CVS Pharmacy." Disabled World (DW), 11 Jul. 2021, revised 27 Feb. 2026. Web. 6 Mar. 2026. <www.disabled-world.com/news/america/vampires-suck-ads.php>.
Chicago: AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "Corporate Vampires Suck Campaign Targets CVS Pharmacy." Disabled World (DW). Last modified February 27, 2026. www.disabled-world.com/news/america/vampires-suck-ads.php.

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