Community Corner
Here's How Many Pain Pills New Providence Pharmacies Receive
A DEA database shows where more than 70 billion painkillers were sent. Here's how many pills New Providence pharmacies received.

NEW PROVIDENCE, NJ — A new report shows billions of painkillers flowed through nearly 83,000 pharmacies across the country, including many in and around New Providence, including Berkeley Heights. A previously unreleased database managed by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration logged where roughly 70 billion pills containing oxycodone and hydrocodone were shipped to, The Washington Post reported Monday.
While the database doesn’t specify what happened after the pharmacies received the shipments, it does illuminate the sheer number of pills that flooded communities. The data includes numbers from 2006 to 2012, the Post reported. Chain and retail pharmacies were included.
According to the database, 19 pharmacies within five miles of New Providence received 9.2 million pills from 2006 to 2012. Many of the same pharmacies were listed when Berkeley Heights was searched in the database.
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Here are some numbers the database found for the individual pharmacies:
Walgreens
343 Springfield Ave., Berkeley Heights
Pills received: 1.1 million
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Walgreens
203 South St., Morristown
Pills received: 606,650
CVS
1260 Springfield Ave.
Pills received: 1 million
CVS
471 Main St., Chatham
Pills received: 756,480
CVS
29 Deforest Ave., Summit
Pills received: 829,800
Liss Medical Arts Pharmacy
33 Overlook Road, Summit
Pills received: 778,680
Scotch Hills Pharmacy
1819 East Second St., Scotch Plains
Pills received: 405,910
Drug Fair of Chatham
650 Shunpike Road
Pills received: 60,400
Stop & Shop
133 Main St., Madison
Pills received: 240,960
White's Morristown Pharmacy
60A South St., Morristown
Pills received: 404, 780
Five pharmacies in Kentucky, Illinois, Idaho and Kansas received the most painkillers per person each year, the Post found. With a total of nearly 6.8 million pills, Shearer Drug in Clinton County, Kentucky, saw the most pills per person per year at 96.
Areas deluged with pain pills saw far higher death rates related to opioids, the Post found. While the national rate was 4.6 deaths per 100,000 residents, counties that received the most pain pills per person saw rates that were more than three times higher.
Perhaps the most startling finding was that just 15 percent of pharmacies received nearly half of the pain pills.
According to the latest provisional data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were nearly 68,000 drug overdose deaths in the United States last year, a 5 percent decline from 2017. The agency predicted that number will rise to more than 680,000 once all data is reported to them.
In its previous report in July, the Post said 75 percent of the pills distributed in the seven-year period came from six companies with pharmacies: McKesson Corp., Walgreens, Cardinal Health, AmerisourceBergen, CVS and Walmart. Four other companies were identified by the paper as being among the top 10 distributors of opioids: Smith Drug Co., Rite Aid, Kroger and H.D. Smith.
Patch national staffers Dan Hampton and Feroze Dhanoa contributed to this report.
Email: daniel.hubbard@patch.com
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