March Canadian
Pharmacy News
News Issue March 2007
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In This
Issue:
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Drugs imports allowed from Canada
For more than two decades,
Congress has been wrestling with the question of whether to allow
prescription drugs to be imported from countries such as
Canada, where prices
are far lower than in the
United
States.
This year, the answer
may be yes.
"I expect us to be
able to send a bill to the president," said Sen. Byron Dorgan, D-N.D.
"We'll see what he does with it."
Dorgan and Sen.
Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, are sponsoring a bill he said would "introduce a
little price competition into the market by allowing the safe importation
of FDA-approved medicines from
Canada and other Western
industrialized nations."
Efforts to bring a
similar bill to the floor last year were foiled by Majority Leader Bill
Frist, R-Tenn., a thoracic surgeon. Since then, Frist has left the Senate
and the leader of the now-majority Democrats, Sen. Harry Reid of
Nevada,
supports the bill.
"Things have changed
around here," Dorgan said. "We are going to get this
done."
Pressure to change the
1987 law prohibiting the importation of drugs from
Canada and
other countries has been growing as prescription prices have escalated
here. Most brand-name prescriptions sold in
Canada and other countries that regulate
drug prices cost far less than in the
U.S.
The ban on imported
drugs allows American drug companies to "dictate the prices
U.S. consumers pay," Dorgan
said.
His bill would achieve
two main objectives:
. Allow drugs
manufactured in the
United
States and sold to
Canada and other Western industrialized
countries to be reimported into the
U.S. as
long as the Food and Drug Administration approves the "chain of
custody."
. Allow drugs
manufactured and packaged in
Canada and other approved countries to be
imported directly to
U.S. consumers if the
manufacturing and shipping facilities are
FDA-approved.
It is unclear whether
Bush would veto the bill. The president has not commented on the current
legislation, but the White House issued a policy statement in 2003 that
said the administration "strongly" opposed a similar
bill.
That statement called
the measure "dangerous legislation" and warned it would "expose Americans
to greater potential risk of harm from unsafe or ineffective drugs, would
be extremely costly to implement, and would overwhelm (the FDA's) already
heavily burdened regulatory system."
A Dorgan spokesman
said he questioned whether Bush would veto the current bill because Bush
said during the 2004 presidential debates that he would support drug
reimportation from
Canada if he was convinced it
was safe.
The spokesman would
not predict whether there would be enough votes in both chambers of
Congress to override a veto. A two-thirds vote would be needed in both the
House and Senate to override a veto.
But the bill does have
strong bipartisan support.
When an FDA official
testified last week before Dorgan's interstate commerce, trade and tourism
subcommittee, some of the sharpest comments about the FDA's position came
from the panel's Republican members.
"We're hearing ...
bureaucratic intransigence about coming up with a way in which to allow
this to happen," Snowe chided Randall Lutter, the FDA's acting deputy
commissioner for policy. "Why isn't there the can-do spirit where it's a
can't-do spirit?"
Sen. Jim DeMint,
R-S.C., noted the FDA already inspects and regulates the food supply
coming into the
U.S. from foreign countries and
said it was inconsistent for the agency to say it could not inspect the
prescription drug supply.
Lutter cited a 2004
government task force report warning that allowing drugs to be imported
would open the floodgates to counterfeit drugs manufactured or packaged
without FDA inspection and approval.
But Dorgan called the
task force's report "a joke" because the panel was filled with Bush
administration members who were on record opposing
reimportation.
William Schultz, an
attorney who served in the same role as Lutter during the Clinton
administration, said American consumers are already purchasing drugs from
Canada and other foreign sources with no way of telling which suppliers
are safe.
Billy Tauzin, a former
Louisiana congressman who is now the
chief executive officer for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers
of America trade group, warned that European countries that allow the
movement of prescription drugs from one country to another have seen a
recent surge in counterfeit drugs, mostly from
China.
Tauzin, a Republican,
argued that the reimportation bill is not needed because the Medicare Part
D prescription drug benefit has lowered the price paid by beneficiaries to
less than they would pay for Canadian and other foreign
drugs.
But Snowe noted that
many Medicare beneficiaries are forced to pay full price for their drugs
when they hit the "doughnut hole" - the gap in which Part D plans do not
cover drug costs.
For more information
on this article refer to: http://www.palmbeachpost.com/politics/content/nation/epaper/ 2007/03/10/m1a_DRUGS_0310.html
>>back to top
From Allergy Season to Allergy Year
(CBS) They're
miserable in
Chicago, hurting in
Atlanta and suffering in
New York.
That's because it's the allergy season - but
as CBS News correspondent Mark Phillips reports, what we
used to call the "allergy season" is becoming the "allergy year."
What allergy sufferers have suspected is true: Allergy season is
starting earlier, lasting longer and becoming more intense. The stuff that
produces the pollen -the grasses, weeds and trees - is the villain you can
see. But there's another villain you can feel - global warming.
It's good for the pollen makers, but bad for us.
At the
British
National
Pollen
Research
Center, they've been tracking airborne pollens
in
Britain around the Northern
Hemisphere. Researchers have found that as average temperatures have
risen, so have pollen levels. Not only that, the nasty stuff is showing up
earlier each year.
"On average, the pollen season is starting
earlier by about five days per decade," says Jean Emberlin of the research
center. "That means people are starting to have hay fever much earlier in
the year than they were two or three decades ago."
Pollen season,
which in the 1970s used to start sometime in May, now begins in early
March.
Visit
www.MediSave.ca to purchase low cost over the counter allergy
medication!
Want
more evidence? Huge clouds of pollen can now be tracked by satellite as
they move across continents.
At the
School of
Public Health at
Harvard, they've found an environmental double whammy. Not only is climate
change speeding up the growth of allergy-causing plants, but carbon
dioxide - one of the greenhouse gases that causes global warming by
trapping the sun's heat - also works on its own to increase pollen output.
"An earlier spring increases pollen production in late-flowering
plants such as ragweed," says Christine Rogers of the Harvard School of
Public Health. "High (carbon dioxide) also increases plant productivity
and results in greater pollen production."
The longer-term
consequences of global warming may still be debated. But one consequence -
the effect on public health - is already here.
For
more related articles on allergies visit: http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/06/30/eveningnews/main1772819.shtml
>>back to
top
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