Seniors
claim Canadian mail-order drugs are safe
by Sharon Michaels
| U.S.
Food and Drug Agency officials say consumers are risking their
health when they illegally import drugs from Canada, but local
seniors say the government warnings are just an attempt to
scare them. Canadian
government officials are also beginning to take a harder
look at cross-border drug traffic because some American
drug manufacturers are cutting off supplies to Canadian
pharmacies set up to serve Americans. |
| U.S. officials
are concerned about counterfeit drugs, and Canadian officials
are concerned that their country's price controls, which
make Canadian drugs a bargain, will come under attack.
A
number of local seniors say they believe the mail-order
drugs are safe, and the price is right.
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| The
government is using "scare tactics" to discourage
people from importing cheaper Canadian drugs, said Halmer
Halverson, 97, a retired General Electric employee who lives
in Olympia. Halverson
had his drugs shipped from Canada for about 18 months. "I
couldn't afford to pay the drugstore prices," he said.
Because
of the government price controls, Canadian drugs are usually
at least 30 percent lower than in the United States. |
| Halverson
had been paying nearly $1,000 for a three-month supply of
drugs to treat his prostate cancer. He paid just over $500
for a 90-day supply shipped from a British Columbia pharmacy.
All
it took for him to cut his medication costs in half was
a prescription from his local physician, which he faxed
to the B.C. pharmacy. Refills were requested by telephone.
Halverson
buys locally now after learning he's eligible for a discount
plan through General Electric. But many of his friends who
are paying for their own prescriptions continue to fax them
to Canada and get their drugs delivered by U.S. mail.
Bonnie
Rinehart, 62, of Olympia is confident the prescription drugs
she orders from Canada are just what the doctor ordered. |
| "They're
the same exact thing that I get here -- the same color, the
same numbers, and my body responds in the right way,"
she said. Lucille
Miller, 77, also of Olympia, said the Canadian pharmacy
she orders from is conscientious about checking the accuracy
of her prescriptions.
"They
do call, and they deal with the (local) doctors," she
said. "They check for (drug) interactions."
Both
women say they save 35 to 40 percent by purchasing from
Canadian pharmacies.
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| Before
Sept. 11, groups of Thurston County seniors got together for
sporadic trips to Canada to buy prescription drugs. Eileen
McKenzieSullivan, executive director of Senior Services for
South Sound, went along on one trip where a couple purchased
a three-month supply of medications that cost them the same
as a one-month supply purchased in the United States.
"(The
savings) allowed them some money to do something socially,"
McKenzieSullivan explained. "Before, they couldn't
go out to eat or go anywhere."
The
Canadian junkets ended after Sept. 11, when border security
was ratcheted up.
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| "It
was just taking so long to get across the border," McKenzieSullivan
said. "Right about that same time, it started to be able
to get them through the mail." Because
drugs are ordered by mail, there is no data on how many
Americans are getting drugs from Canada.
Americans
should pressure the U.S. government to control drug prices,
said Barry Power, director of practice development for the
Canadian Pharmacists Association.
"There
is a deficit in American social policy that is driving (Americans)
to a foreign country to get their medications," he
said.
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| For
years, U.S. and Canadian officials ignored cross-border traffic
in prescription drugs, although it's illegal because all drugs
sold in the United States must be FDA-approved. When
Congress passed the Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement
and Modernization of 2003, it authorized the importation
of drugs from Canada under certain conditions and directed
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to do a
study of drug importation, to be completed by December 2004.
HHS
Secretary Tommy Thompson announced late last month that
he will create a task force to advise the department on
the safe importation of prescription drugs. FDA Commissioner
Mark McClellan will head the group.
One
of the jobs of the task force will be to try to determine
the volume of drugs coming into the United States by mail. |
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