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Articles > Online Prescriptions
Drug Re-importation Makes Sense to Seniors
WASHINGTON (CNN)
Charlotte Walton, 66, was one of dozens of seniors
who used to travel by bus to Canada to buy her prescription drugs at a
fraction of the cost.
"There, I saved half the price of what I would
have paid here in the United States," Walton said.
A congressional amendment passed by the Senate on Wednesday
will allow Walton's local pharmacist to re-import her prescriptions from
Canada at the cheaper price the Canadian government negotiates for its
national health care patients.
Walton says the bill will help many seniors who are having trouble paying
for their prescriptions.
"My husband worked five years past his retirement
to put a few bucks away so we could live comfortably," she said,
"but that isn't going to last long with the price of drugs they have
right now."
But the man who organized the bus trips that helped
Walton get cheaper medications, John Marvin of the National Council of
Senior Citizens, is skeptical the drug companies will go along with the
measure.
"I just don't think that they are prepared to give
up the profits that the American market represents," he said.
Marvin said there are several ways for drug companies
to get around the bill.
"One way is to clearly limit the amount of drugs
going into Canada," Marvin said. "A second way is to require
FDA (Food and Drug Administration) inspections of all the drugs being
re-imported into this country, even though they are being made in this
country."
Republican lawmakers defended the bill, saying they
have closed as many loopholes as they possibly can.
"The drug companies don't like this bill, and the
reason they don't like this bill is they think it's going to be effective,"
said Sen. Slade Gorton of Washington.
But Clinton Administration officials say the only way
to guarantee seniors the relief they need is to allow them to band together
under Medicare to negotiate with drug companies for the same kinds of
discounts insurance companies and the Canadian government have.
Charlotte Walton says she's never understood why she
and other seniors have paid so much more.
"It makes me angry, and I've heard a lot
comments on it that other people feel the same way," she said. "Why
can't we get it?"
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