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Hi Val,

I can't believe this Lyme brain forgot to save the info in her favorites

file....well, here is one I just found real quick:

http://caregiver.com/march-april97/articles/free.html

I will check for more and post later. This will give me a good reason to

check out those archives too.

Hugs,

Marta

>From: ValP74@...

>

>Hi guys, i remember someone posting a web site or address where you can

>purchase prescription drugs. I lost it and would like to kow if whoever did

>it (I think Marta ) could post it again. I would really appreciate

this. -Val

>

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  • 4 years later...
Guest guest

Thanks Doug...I'll pass this one on..

mel ;-)

Prescription Drugs

This is very interesting.... On Monday night, Steve ,

investigative reporter for channel 7 News in Detroit, did a story on

generic drug price gouging by pharmacies. He found in his

investigation, that some of these generic drugs were marked up as much

as 3,000% or more. No, that's not a typo..... three thousand percent!

Mr. did a thorough research, and checked out all the major

drugstore chains, discount chains, independent pharmacies,

and even checked on some Canadian pharmacies. So often, we blame the

drug companies for the high cost of drugs, and usually

rightfully so. But in this case, the fault clearly lies with the

pharmacies themselves. For example, if you had to buy a prescription

drug, and bought the name brand, you might pay $100.00 for 100 pills.

The pharmacist might tell you that if you get the generic equivalent,

they would only cost $80.00, making you think you are " saving "

$20.00 What the pharmacist is not telling you is that those 100 generic

pills may have only cost him $10.00!

At the end of the report, one of the anchors asked Mr. whether

or not there were any pharmacies that did not adhere to this

practice, and he said that Costco consistently charged little over their

cost for the generic drugs.

They gave the link to Costco, which I will include here, so that you can

go and check prices for yourself. www.costco.com

<http://www.costco.com> <<http://www.costco.com/>> Costco Online

pharmacy Costco Online I went to the Costco site, where

you can look up any drug, and get it's online price.

It says that the in-store prices are consistent with the online prices.

I was appalled. Just to give you one example from my own experience, I

had to use the drug, Compazine, which helps prevent

nausea in chemo patients. I used the generic equivalent, which cost

$54.99 for 60 pills at CVS. I checked the price at Costco, and

I could have bought 100 pills for $19.89. For 145 of my pain pills, I

paid $72.57. I could have got 150 at Costco for $28.08.

I would like to mention, that although Costco is a " membership " type

store, you do NOT have to be a member to buy prescriptions

there, as it is a federally regulated substance. You just tell them at

the door that you wish to use the pharmacy, and they will let

you in.

I am asking each of you to please help me by copying this letter, and

pasting it into your own email, and send it to everyone you

know with an email address. And if anyone has other ideas of how to

address this problem, please contact me at

This practice is almost sinful, and just maybe, working together, we can

make a difference. Thank you for your time, and thank you

--------- End Original Message ---------

____________________________________________________

IncrediMail - Email has finally evolved - Click Here

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Guest guest

Thanks Doug...I'll pass this one on..

mel ;-)

Prescription Drugs

This is very interesting.... On Monday night, Steve ,

investigative reporter for channel 7 News in Detroit, did a story on

generic drug price gouging by pharmacies. He found in his

investigation, that some of these generic drugs were marked up as much

as 3,000% or more. No, that's not a typo..... three thousand percent!

Mr. did a thorough research, and checked out all the major

drugstore chains, discount chains, independent pharmacies,

and even checked on some Canadian pharmacies. So often, we blame the

drug companies for the high cost of drugs, and usually

rightfully so. But in this case, the fault clearly lies with the

pharmacies themselves. For example, if you had to buy a prescription

drug, and bought the name brand, you might pay $100.00 for 100 pills.

The pharmacist might tell you that if you get the generic equivalent,

they would only cost $80.00, making you think you are " saving "

$20.00 What the pharmacist is not telling you is that those 100 generic

pills may have only cost him $10.00!

At the end of the report, one of the anchors asked Mr. whether

or not there were any pharmacies that did not adhere to this

practice, and he said that Costco consistently charged little over their

cost for the generic drugs.

They gave the link to Costco, which I will include here, so that you can

go and check prices for yourself. www.costco.com

<http://www.costco.com> <<http://www.costco.com/>> Costco Online

pharmacy Costco Online I went to the Costco site, where

you can look up any drug, and get it's online price.

It says that the in-store prices are consistent with the online prices.

I was appalled. Just to give you one example from my own experience, I

had to use the drug, Compazine, which helps prevent

nausea in chemo patients. I used the generic equivalent, which cost

$54.99 for 60 pills at CVS. I checked the price at Costco, and

I could have bought 100 pills for $19.89. For 145 of my pain pills, I

paid $72.57. I could have got 150 at Costco for $28.08.

I would like to mention, that although Costco is a " membership " type

store, you do NOT have to be a member to buy prescriptions

there, as it is a federally regulated substance. You just tell them at

the door that you wish to use the pharmacy, and they will let

you in.

I am asking each of you to please help me by copying this letter, and

pasting it into your own email, and send it to everyone you

know with an email address. And if anyone has other ideas of how to

address this problem, please contact me at

This practice is almost sinful, and just maybe, working together, we can

make a difference. Thank you for your time, and thank you

--------- End Original Message ---------

____________________________________________________

IncrediMail - Email has finally evolved - Click Here

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  • 2 years later...

November 20, 2005

latimes.com : Current : Commentary

Print E-mail story Most e-mailed Change text size

Take your pills, ignore your bellyBy Greg Critser, Greg Critser is the author of "Generation Rx: How Prescription Drugs Are Altering American Bodies, Minds and Lives."

LAST WEEK, stock market analysts parsed the latest sales reports from the nation's biggest drug companies in search of why profits in the normally high-performing industry have plummeted. Good luck finding anything new. Pharma chief executives offer up only the usual culprits: generic competition, overzealous regulators, trial lawyers, bad public relations and the high cost of discovering new drugs.

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But one place to look for the real answer is right in front of our eyes and, increasingly, in our bellies. It's the pills. As my nephew might say, they suck in a major way. They're neither as effective nor as safe as we are led to believe.That's because only about half of pharma's products launched since 1990 represent clinically significant improvements over older, cheaper products — and that's the positive spin from pharma's own think tanks. Worse, problems from side effects are soaring — particularly as one in six Americans now take three or more prescription drugs daily, usually in combinations never even tested on animals. No wonder pharma earnings are in the tank. The patient is sick of being the lab rat. And that's one big reason why only about half of patients stay on any given regimen, a definite bummer for prescription renewals and thus sales.Big Pharma's response? Denial and deflection.The deflection comes in the form of a huge, over-the-top ad blitz touting the industry's new cancer drugs — despite the fact that most of the handful of truly breakthrough oncology drugs came not from Big Pharma but from biotech upstarts. Thus a Norvartis ad in last week's New Yorker magazine featured a patient telling us that "Novartis drove my cancer into remission in 56 days," with, of course, a minuscule disclaimer that no cure is being claimed.Why, then, the blitz? To get across the crybaby capitalist idea that we shouldn't criticize pharma too much. That notion was explicitly stated a month ago by a pundit from the pharma-sponsored American Enterprise Institute who, countering a blistering critique of the industry on "Real Time with Bill Maher," shouted: "But they're curing cancer!" That line has migrated to other pro-industry pundits, such as Tucker Carlson, who a few weeks ago countered another critic by shouting: "Wow, I hope you don't get cancer, man." Call them the cancer nannies.The denial of the bad-product problem comes from one of the fastest-growing divisions within Big Pharma these days. It has nothing to do with R & D but with what the industry likes to call "persistence and compliance." In short, a persistence-and-compliance executive tries to figure out how to keep a patient on a pill — even if the patient doesn't like it. Pharma has invented, yes, corporate nannying!Often, P & C programs are run in partnerships between HMOs and pharma. The hectoring comes via phone calls or e-mails to patients from a "health counselor" (P & C reps). But increasingly, P & C reveals itself for what it is: marketing. Consider the riffs of Ray Sacchetti, the P & C chief at Bristol-Myers Squibb. In a study of what he calls "adherence marketing," Sacchetti told industry marketers that he could prove that direct-to-consumer, or DTC, ads could increase compliance. "If you do 160 days of DTC, you get a 35% rate of compliance in 12 months," he said. "But if you do 250 days of DTC ads, you get 65% compliance!" Wow, and we thought we were just getting an idiotic ad.What does all this mean? It means huge amounts of money are spent getting us to take our pills — and shut up while we're doing so — while less and less is being spent to discover pills we really need. That's pharma's right in our free market system, but P & C can also harm patients by encouraging them to keep taking a drug that may be harmful. Such was the case with many programs designed to increase compliance with pain relievers (-2s), antidepressants (SSRIs) and diabetes (glitazones). Worse, few P & C programs seek out the legitimate reasons patients stop taking their pills — information, for example, on side effects, adverse events and special individual sensitivities and physiological traits.For pharma CEOs, that's a place to start looking for the real reason behind those sinking sales.

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