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Fewer
U.S. residents purchase prescription drugs
from Canada, in part because of Medicare
Drug Benefit
[Nov
05, 2007]
Online drug sales in 2006 from Canadian
pharmacies to U.S. consumers dropped about
50%, from $420 million Canadian dollars in
2005 to $211 million Canadian dollars last
year, according to data from
IMS Health, the
Philadelphia Inquirer reports.
Drug sales across the border to U.S.
patients -- once "a hot trend" -- have been
suppressed by several factors, including
threats from U.S. pharmaceutical companies
to stop supplying drugs to Canadian firms,
rising drug costs in Canada, a weaker U.S.
dollar compared with the Canadian dollar and
the 2006 introduction of the Medicare
prescription drug benefit, the Inquirer
reports.
Legislation (S
1082) introduced this year by
Sens. Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) and Byron
Dorgan (D-N.D.) would reduce restrictions on
imports and enhance safety by calling for
all exporters and importers to register with
federal authorities. The
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America opposes prescription drug
imports, citing the possibilities that
counterfeiting could rise and existing
safety regulations could be compromised.
FDA has "conducted periodic
sweeps against drugs delivered through the
mail," but "its leaders admit they lack the
staff to do a thorough job," the Inquirer
reports.
Ilisa Bernstein, FDA's director of pharmacy
affairs, said the agency does not know for
certain whether online sales are increasing
or decreasing. She said, "We really don't
have the resources to quantify the number of
products coming in," adding that FDA uses a
"risk-based approach" to select the drugs
that pose a high level of danger and need
closer safety scrutiny. Bernstein said,
"What's scary is, a lot of these online
sellers will sell you drugs without a
prescription."
Randall Lutter, FDA's deputy commissioner
for policy, in a statement said, "The data
lead us to believe that many people are
buying drugs online not to save money but to
bypass the need for a prescription from
their doctor, since these Web sites
typically do not require the purchaser to
have a prescription" (Stark, Philadelphia
Inquirer, 11/5).
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