What is Asthenis’ origin story? What inspired you to start a pharmacy in your hometown of Providence?
My name is Eugenio Fernandez Jr., PharmD, MBA, MPH. I grew up nearby on Hanover Street in Providence and attended Asa Messer Annex and Elementary, Bridgham Middle School, Classical High School, University of RI for undergraduate and Harvard University for graduate school.
The name Asthenis originates from the word Astheneis – which is greek for the word “patients”. The name Asthenis is a constant reminder to our organization to not become inundated by administrative tasks and to instead emphasize the people (patients). We are a new type of pharmacy – without candy, junk food, and other unhealthy temptations- that focuses solely on the patient – “Asthenis”.
What inspired me to start Asthenis in Providence is that I wanted to use health education to help close health equity gaps between social classes in our community. During my graduate studies I had the opportunity to study health care systems at a high level. That experience made me feel that if I didn’t become an entrepreneur, then I would become part of the problem. After graduate school, I deferred my opportunity to work for the FDA and returned to Providence. I found the Social Enterprise Greenhouse online and signed up as a co-hub member. This allowed me to work on Asthenis in between my work breaks.
How is Asthenis helping to democratize health care? How is education central to your work?
Asthenis helps mitigate gaps in health equity by providing access to health information and pharmacy pickup services to a community where there is currently a vacuum for such services. Additionally, Asthenis teams up with local non-profit organizations to help organize activities centered on providing the community access to health education.
What is your larger vision for Asthenis? What is one thing you wish you knew before founding Asthenis?
Asthenis’ vision is to be the community’s source for reliable health information. We believe people like to take care of themselves; they just need access to reliable health information so they can make the right decisions for themselves.
An ongoing issue among health care organizations is an unintended propensity to emphasize administration over the people. For example, the average length of a doctor’s office visit is 15 minutes. Both doctors and patients would tell you that that is not enough time to diagnose, treat, and address all questions and concerns appropriately. Yet the doctor’s office remains our only source of reliable health information. Consequently, I created Asthenis to be our community’s accessible resource for reliable health information.
Interested in getting more involved? Have an idea for a collaboration? Check out our FB page: https://www.facebook.com/asthenisusa/