Recent news about 24‑hour pharmacies centers on both new around‑the‑clock services and the ongoing struggle to keep them open amid staffing shortages and financial pressures.[1][3][4]
Expanding 24‑hour access
In South Australia, the first community “24/7” pharmacy opened at National Pharmacies in Norwood, staying open from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m. with a pharmacist on site, and handled more than 40 patients on its opening night, including parents needing infant‑care medicines and people with infections such as UTIs. The state government plans to roll out two more 24‑hour pharmacies in Salisbury Plain and Clovelly Park, funded at about 2.5 million dollars per year, to reduce avoidable emergency‑department visits.[7][1]
Holiday and overnight coverage
In the U.S., some independent chains like Kinney Drugs have kept at least one location open 24 hours on holidays such as Easter Sunday, highlighting the need for urgent‑access medication when most pharmacies close. These extended‑hours stores fill prescriptions for patients who cannot wait for a regular‑hours pharmacy, especially late‑night or holiday discharges.[2]
Closures and “24‑hour crisis”
At the same time, numerous chains such as CVS and Walmart have cut overnight hours or closed their last 24‑hour outlets, citing pharmacist shortages and thin margins, which users describe as a “24‑hour pharmacy crisis” for hospice, home‑care, and late‑night discharge patients. In some regions, there are now no 24‑hour pharmacies within the city, forcing patients to travel long distances at odd hours for essential medications.[3][4]
If you tell me your country or city (for example, Warsaw or a U.S. state), I can narrow this down to local 24‑hour‑pharmacy news or where the nearest 24‑hour options are.