Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 As correctly stated earlier, co-pay is more a function of the insurance plan, so it not valid to compare them without considering the list price. For example, last year my co-pay for a month of Synthroid was $2. This year it increased to $5. It has always been the " minimum " co-pay for Synthroid for the short time I have been on it, although I know it was higher in the past. I pay a lot more for other prescriptions, and so does my wife. Since that is the minimum co-pay, it is also what I would pay for a generic. Thus, there is no financial savings for me at all to switch to either a generic or to a version with T3. I will need to be convinced on the basis of efficacy rather than cost. Even if there were a small difference, it would not be worth the expense of the extra blood tests needed to adjust the dosage. Gracia's friend is paying $48 for three months of Synthroid or $16 per month. That seems incredibly high for a co-pay for Synthroid, but Joan says hers was even higher, $25.00 per month compared to 11.60 for Levoxyl. I wonder if these aren't old numbers from before the patent expiration.(?) Rather than co-pays, we need to compare retail prices on the web. I'll first refer you to the Canadian prices I looked up a few months ago, since these are most readily available and give typical proportions. Generic Levothyroxine at my dosage was then listed at $1.50 per month or 5 cents per day, U.S. That same supplier wanted 19 cents per day for Synthroid or $5.70 per month. The ratio between these is even higher than Joan's co-pay ratio. However, the total on either drug is not that great and nowhere near the co-pays listed by Gracia and Joan. My insurance company probably pays at least double the Canadian bargains, but I still can't beat my co-pay by shopping in Canada, even for Armour. Double the Canadian price is still below Gracia's and Joan's co-pays. Evidently the price of Synthroid has dropped even further since then, because I could not find any supplier with a difference in price for Synthroid and the generics. Perhaps more accurately, the price of Synthroid stayed put and the generics increased a bit until they matched. The first supplier I looked at today (Pharmacy, Inc) lists both Synthroid and Levoxyl at $4.95 per month. World Drug Mart lists both Levoxyl and Synthroid at $4.79 per month. Senior Medications.com offers them both at $4.80 per month. In-House Pharmacy wanted $6.00 per month for Eltroxin but went much lower if you bought 1,000 tablets at a time. The highest I found was Freedom Pharmacy, which wanted $9.66 per month for a slightly lower dose. That is nearly double the others but still below the co-pays listed above. Another complication that I just mentioned above in passing, is that the proper dosage for Synthroid is typically lower by at least one step from the generics. That would have tended to close the cost gap even further, when there was one. Evidently that gap has now vanished. So, if anyone is actually paying a co-pay of $25 per month for Synthroid, I suggest either getting a new prescription plan, importing from Canada, searching for a bargain generic under your plan, or all three. Chuck Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2004 Report Share Posted June 30, 2004 The first supplier I looked at today (Pharmacy, Inc) lists both Synthroid and Levoxyl at $4.95 per month. World Drug Mart lists both Levoxyl and Synthroid at $4.79 per month. How do you go about getting a Rx through these people? _________________________________________________________________ MSN 9 Dial-up Internet Access fights spam and pop-ups – now 3 months FREE! http://join.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200361ave/direct/01/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2004 Report Share Posted July 1, 2004 K a r e n, You wrote: > The first supplier I looked at today (Pharmacy, Inc) lists both > Synthroid and Levoxyl at $4.95 per month. World Drug Mart lists both > Levoxyl and Synthroid at $4.79 per month. > > How do you go about getting a Rx through these people? > The typical Canadian arrangement is for your (U.S. I assume) physician to first write a three month prescription. Their Canadian employed physician then writes duplicate or equivalent prescriptions (unlimited times), which their pharmacy fills. You don't have to go back to your doc again, unless you want to, but you do need the initial three month version to be completely legal. Getting started takes a while, but the flow is usually steady later. I would not recommend going to fly-by-night outfits that offer to write prescriptions for you without seeing you or your own doctor's prescription. You risk having your order seized at the border, a small but non-zero risk, and you may not have recourse if something gets mixed up. If they routinely operate outside the law in another country, which this would be, you will not be likely to be able to enforce any corrective active. The statistics say most of the drugs such companies ship are counterfeit or at the wrong dosage anyway. Chuck Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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