Larry Merlo


Larry J. Merlo is the president and CEO of CVS Health.

Background

Merlo grew up in Charleroi, Pennsylvania, just south of Pittsburgh, and graduated from Charleroi Area High School in 1973. He graduated from the University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy in 1978.

Career

Merlo began his career at Peoples Drug, and joined CVS Pharmacy in 1990, when Peoples was acquired by CVS. He served as senior vice president of stores, Executive Vice President – Stores, executive vice president of CVS Caremark, president of CVS Pharmacy, and chief operating officer. He was appointed chief executive officer in 2011.
In 2014, after CVS refined its purpose of "helping people on their path to better health", Merlo announced that CVS would be the first major retail pharmacy to discontinue tobacco sales in all of its stores. He also announced that CVS would attempt to expand its line of “MinuteClinics,” which are walk-in health clinics, from 800 locations to 1,500 by 2017. In 2017, Merlo was also behind the decision that CVS would limit access to opioid painkillers.

Honors and board memberships

Merlo serves on the board of the National Association of Chain Drug Stores and the University of Pittsburgh’s board of trustees. He is also a member of the Business Roundtable.
In 2014, he was named number 31 by Fortune Magazine as the Biz Person of the Year.
Merlo and his daughter, Kristen, joined First Lady Michelle Obama as one of her special guests at the 2015 State of the Union Address on January 20.
In 2016, Merlo was named University of Pittsburgh's 2016 Distinguished Alumni Fellow, which recognizes graduates with records of professional achievement and community service.

Family life

Merlo lives in East Greenwich, Rhode Island, with his college sweetheart, Lee Ann. They were married in 1978. Together they have a daughter, Kristen Merlo.

Criticism

In 2015, it was revealed that Merlo had the highest CEO-to-average-employee pay ratio of any American company by Fortune Magazine. CVS has also been criticized under Merlo's tenure as CEO for understaffing, not allowing pharmacy staff to take breaks, and underfunding critical aspects of daily operations.
Additionally, claims of CVS using unethical and strong arm business practices during Merlo's tenure have been made. Several states are currently looking into CVS's pharmacy benefits manager use of spread pricing and patient steering.