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World-Famous Wall Drug Isn鈥檛 Immune From Challenges Facing Rural Pharmacies
Postcard From South Dakota

World-Famous Wall Drug Isn鈥檛 Immune From Challenges Facing Rural Pharmacies

The independent pharmacy serving locals, remote ranchers, and sightseers faces challenges despite being part of a popular South Dakota tourist attraction. (Bernard Friel/Education Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

WALL, S.D. 鈥 Stacey Schulz parks in a rear lot to avoid the crowded Main Street entrances to her local pharmacy.

鈥淒uring the summer, it鈥檚 kind of hectic,鈥 she said after greeting the pharmacist and technician by name.

That鈥檚 because Schulz鈥檚 pharmacy is tucked inside Wall Drug, a tourist attraction that takes up almost an entire block and draws more than 2 million visitors a year to a community of fewer than 700 residents.

The business is named after the town of Wall, which is just off Interstate 90 near Badlands National Park. Colorful, hand-painted billboards dot the roadside for hundreds of miles, telling motorists how far they are from Wall Drug鈥檚 free ice water, 5-cent coffee, and homemade doughnuts. Visitors can pan for gold, listen to singing animatronic cowboys, try on Western wear, and shop for souvenirs, including plush jackalopes 鈥 mythical jackrabbits with antelope horns.

Despite being part of a booming tourist attraction, Wall Drug鈥檚 pharmacy faces challenges common to independent rural pharmacies.

It鈥檚 the lone pharmacy in Wall, serving locals year-round. Some, like Schulz, live in town, while others live on ranches as far as 60 miles away. The next-nearest pharmacy is a 30-minute drive northeast.

Wall Drug also serves tourists who forget their prescriptions at home, get sick while roaming the country in their RVs, or hurt themselves while hiking through the otherworldly rock formations of the scorching Badlands, said Cindy Dinger, its sole pharmacist.

A photo of a pharmacist seem behind a pane of glass with a round hole. The hole frames her head and shoulders.
Pharmacist Cindy Dinger says her corner of the store would struggle without the rest of Wall Drug. 鈥淎ll this stuff around us 鈥 the poster and print shop, the boot shop, the fudge shop, the caf茅 鈥 they pay our bills,” she says.(Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)

Wall has no hospital, but a clinic is open four days a week. Schulz, a medical assistant there, said she and her co-workers see a lot of summer tourists. They send them to Wall Drug to pick up prescriptions.

鈥淎nd then we tell them to get fudge before they leave,鈥 Schulz said.

Rural pharmacies, especially independent ones, closed at a higher rate from 2003 to 2021 than pharmacies in other areas, according to a By 2021, the institute found, nearly 8% of rural counties were . The Wall Drug pharmacy has fewer customers than a typical city pharmacy, which can mean less profit, Dinger said.

She said some of its prices are higher because the store can鈥檛 negotiate discounts as steep as the deals suppliers grant chain pharmacies. Rural drugstores also lack leverage with insurers, and they face increasing competition from mail-order pharmacies.

Another challenge is staffing. When Dinger needs time off, she finds a fill-in from Rapid City, nearly an hour鈥檚 drive away.

鈥淚t’s a challenge getting relief if I want to go on vacation or if I need a cover so that I can go to a doctor’s appointment,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou take what you can get and try to schedule around it.鈥

Dinger said her pharmacy would struggle without the rest of Wall Drug.

鈥淎ll this stuff around us 鈥 the poster and print shop, the boot shop, the fudge shop, the caf茅 鈥 they pay our bills,鈥 she said.

The pharmacy鈥檚 white facade, with stained-glass signs and windows, is modeled after that of the original drugstore, which was across the street. The window displays and top shelves inside the store are filled with vintage pharmacy supplies, including manuals, glass medicine bottles, and a suppository-making machine.

Tourists carrying shopping bags and sporting new cowboy hats stop to look at the displays. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a real pharmacy,鈥 a woman said, sounding surprised.

Dinger and Sylvia Smith, the store鈥檚 only pharmacy tech, ring customers up below a Tiffany-style light fixture and retrieve prescriptions stored behind a wooden desk and wall.

Wall Drug鈥檚 pharmacy, across from its chapel and sandwiched between the fudge and rockhound shops along 鈥淐owboy Alley,” takes up less than 1% of the space within the 76,000-square-foot tourist attraction in South Dakota. (Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)
A photo of a pharmacist scanning a tourist's items at a cash register.
Dinger checks out tourist Will Lovitt after giving him advice on treating a mysterious rash he developed while visiting the Black Hills of South Dakota. (Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)
Sylvia Smith, the sole pharmacy tech at Wall Drug, works behind a wooden counter. Shelves display vintage equipment alongside modern medicine. (Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)
Stacey Schulz has to navigate around tourists when she picks up medicine during the summer from her local pharmacy, Wall Drug. (Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)

Customer Will Lovitt said a friend advised him and his wife to stop at Wall Drug during their drive from Indiana to the Black Hills in western South Dakota. Lovitt developed a rash on the trip and ended up using the visit to get Dinger鈥檚 advice on treating it.

He said it can be difficult for tourists to know where to find medical help, especially when driving through rural states like South Dakota.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 time that America gets back to the grass roots of the small-town doctor and the small-town pharmacist,鈥 Lovitt said.

Alex Davis and a friend decided to visit Wall Drug on their road trip from Kansas to Yellowstone National Park.

鈥淭hen, when I saw there was a little pharmacy, I thought I’d grab something that I needed,鈥 she said.

Davis bought Dramamine to treat car sickness on the long drive.

Dinger said she occasionally sees unusual situations, like the time several years ago when a park ranger needed antibiotics after getting bitten by a prairie dog.

鈥淵ou never know what kind of diseases they might be carrying,鈥 she said of the animals, which recently were hit with

Rick Hustead is the chairman of Wall Drug. The store was opened in 1931 by his grandfather, pharmacist Ted Hustead. Ted鈥檚 wife, Dorothy, had the idea to advertise its soda fountain and free ice water to tourists traveling along unpaved roads during the hot years of the Dust Bowl era. Rick鈥檚 father, pharmacist Bill Hustead, began expanding the store in the 鈥50s, turning it into the tourist magnet it is today.

A photo of an older man working behind a counter with a young woman.
Rick Hustead, chairman of Wall Drug, works the restaurant counter when things get busy. Hustead, whose grandfather opened the store in 1931, says he’d never close the pharmacy, even though it鈥檚 not the main attraction. 鈥淲e can’t be Wall Drug without being a drugstore,鈥 he says.(Arielle Zionts/麻豆女优 Health News)

Rick Hustead didn鈥檛 follow his father and grandfather鈥檚 path to pharmacy school, so he had to recruit pharmacists from elsewhere.

Hustead found Dinger in 2010 after writing a letter to each pharmacist in the state.

Dinger said she was living at the time in Sioux Falls, South Dakota鈥檚 most populous city. But she and her husband were interested in raising their kids in a small town, the way she grew up. Dinger was also attracted by the store鈥檚 limited hours: She鈥檇 be done working by 5 p.m. on weekdays and have the weekends off.

Hustead said his family has never considered closing the pharmacy, even though it鈥檚 not the main attraction for most visitors.

鈥淲e can’t be Wall Drug without being a drugstore,鈥 he said.