Online Pharmacies No Prescription
Prescription
Drugs: the facts the FDA don't address.. but who is paying the price?
The High Cost of Prescription Drugs for Uninsured Americans
It
is all very well for the FDA to crack down on online internet pharmacies
(and rightly so on fraudsters) but millions of uninsured and underinsured
Americans struggle to afford the medicines they need, even forgoing
medically necessary drugs when prices are out of reach. When discussing
the high cost of prescription drugs, politicians often focus on the
financial burden carried by senior citizens. Unfortunately, as this
report shows, high prescription drug prices are a problem for Americans
of all ages, particularly for the uninsured.
Today,
nearly 46 million Americans under the age of 65 lack health insurance,
and millions more with insurance lack prescription drug coverage. Young
adults from 19 to 34 years old are the fastest growing group of uninsured,
accounting for 40 percent of the total.
At
the same time, prescription drug prices are skyrocketing in the United
States, rising much faster than the rate of inflation. In 2005, Americans
spent $252 billion on prescription drugs.
During
the spring of 2006, researchers from the state Public Interest Research
Groups (PIRGs) posed as uninsured customers and surveyed by phone hundreds
of pharmacies in 35 cities across the country to determine how much
uninsured consumers are paying for 10 prescription drugs commonly used
by adults under age 65. We then compared these prices with the prices
the pharmaceutical companies charge the federal government; with prices
at a Canadian pharmacy; and with the results of a similar survey we
completed in 2004. Key findings include:
NATIONAL
FINDINGS
• Uninsured Americans pay 60 percent more on average than what
the federal government pays for the prescription drugs we surveyed.
•
Uninsured Americans pay twice as much for drugs purchased at local pharmacies
as they would pay if they purchased the same drugs from a Canadian pharmacy.
•
Compared with our 2004 survey, the cost of the nine prescription drugs
we surveyed increased by 11 percent, 81 percent faster than the general
rate of inflation between 2004 and 2006.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The state PIRGs support the following common sense solutions to the
problem of overpriced prescription drugs.
Increase
the Availability of Generic Drugs
Lower-cost generic drugs
could save Medicare, Medicaid and consumers billions of dollars. The
state PIRGs support increasing the Food and Drug Administration’s
budget devoted to approving generic drug applications in order to ease
the substantial backlog. We also support closing loopholes that allow
drug makers to hold on to their patents and slow the introduction of
generic drugs to the market.
Establish
Prescription Drug-Buying Pools
The state PIRGs support creating prescription drug-buying pools at the
state and multi-state level to allow individuals, businesses and the
government to use their combined buying power to negotiate lower drug
prices.
Limit
Drug Makers’ Marketing Tactics
Drug makers’ marketing tactics encourage doctors and consumers
to request the newest and more expensive medication, regardless of proof
about its superiority to the older, less expensive drug. The state PIRGs
support limiting direct-to-consumer advertising, restricting marketing
to doctors, and placing strict limits or outright bans on gifts from
drug makers to doctors.
End
Secret Deals with Drug Makers
The state PIRGs support efforts to increase transparency and accountability
for Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs), which negotiate deals with drug
makers on behalf of insurers, state health programs, and large businesses.
These deals are shrouded in secrecy and have led to lawsuits alleging
that PBMs fail to act in their clients’ best fiduciary interest.
Legalize
Prescription Drug Importation
The state PIRGs support legalizing prescription drug importation as
an interim solution for the millions of uninsured consumers who cannot
afford to purchase their medications in the United States. A
good pharmacy to safely start obtaining or personally importing your
prescription medications from is at Pharmacy Network .. 7/11/2006
Federation of Public Interest Research Groups
and..
Los Angeles Times columnist David Lazarus writes ".. until
the U.S. can extend health coverage to everyone and limit drug prices
to reasonable levels, many Americans will have no choice but to seek
the best possible deal for their meds, and this will often require them
to look beyond our borders, via the Internet. Lawmakers need to step
carefully in any crackdown on Internet drug sales because, simply put,
we can't punish people for trying to make up for shortfalls of the U.S.
health care system."
The
Law! .. In the case of the USA (and indeed most Countries) the FDA (and
other Government authorities) will allow you to legally import up to
three months supply of a medication providing it is for your personal
usage and not for resale.
Pharmacy
Network are one of the leading online pharmacies.. established over
10 years they supply a huge range of brand and generic medications including
cancer drugs, diabetes drugs, HIV and anti viral drugs, antibiotics,
CNS stimulants, heart & cardiovascular medications, female hormones
and pain management drugs..