Seniors on drug train buy cheaper medicines in Canada

Published on

Associated Press


TORONTO — After a 600-mile train ride to a drug store in Toronto, June Marie Preston said Thursday she was buying medication that would save her thousands of dollars a year compared to prices in her Pennsylvania hometown.

The 68-year-old and her sister Marion Hicks, 67, who live together in Douglassville had traveled by train with 21 other Americans seeking to stock up on three-month supplies of cheaper Canadian drugs.

“I hope to realize 50 percent savings,” Preston said, noting her asthma medications cost $556 a month in the United States.

Preston, a former office manager, criticized U.S. politicians, saying they are sheltered by their own government drug plan and out of touch with regular citizens.

“They have no idea what the general public is going through in this issue with medicines,” she said.

Hicks, a retired teacher and hospital chaplain who needs drugs to control diabetes and a heart condition, said the duo joined the train, dubbed the Rx Express, in Philadelphia after it left Miami on Monday on its way to Toronto.

“I would like for our government to become aware of the plight of the people, not to work with the drug companies,” Hicks said.

She said Medicare should be allowed to buy in bulk from drug companies as is done in countries such as Canada to lower drug costs to the consumer.

Canada regulates drug prices as part of its national health care system, while the market dictates pricing in the United States. Many popular medications for chronic conditions such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol can be bought in Canada at less than half the U.S. price.

U.S.-based Pfizer Inc., the world’s largest pharmaceutical maker, and GlaxoSmithKline, AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals LP and Wyeth have threatened to cut supplies to Canadian pharmacies if they deem orders are too large for merely the Canadian domestic market to prevent the medicine from being resold to Americans.

Canadian drugs are often the same as their U.S. counterparts, manufactured by Canadian subsidiaries of these mostly U.S. drug companies, said Louise Crandall, public affairs manager of the Canadian Pharmaceutical Association.

“Some of the dosages, formulations and packaging may be different, but it’sbasically the same drug you’d find in the U.S.,” Crandall said from Ottawa. “Canadian drugs are perfectly safe.”

A “theoretical concern” is that Canadian drugs with minor variations from U.S. versions may not treat a patient exactly as well as the one they were initially stabilized with in the U.S., association executive director Jeffrey Poston said.

“But we haven’t heard of lots of problems arising from that and it’s not a life-threatening issue,” Poston said.

Jerry Flanagan of the Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a nonpartisan lobbying group that organized the train trip, said its aim was a political statement.

“The point of this trip is to bring about policy change in the U.S.,” Flanagan said outside a drug store on Toronto’s busy Yonge Street. “It’s just like any pharmacy you see back in the U.S. There is no fear here. It’s a scare campaign by the pharmaceutical companies,” he said.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration opposes commercial prescription drug imports, arguing that it cannot vouch for their safety. Individuals, however, can buy as much as three months of medication for personal use with a U.S. prescription.

A similar trip was staged on the West Coast in August, when about two dozen Americans chartered a two-car train for a four-day whistle-stop trip from San Diego to Vancouver.

Mildred Fruhling, 76, of Edison, N.J., said she boarded the train in Manhattan Tuesday with her husband to buy prescription drugs at about half the cost their cost in the U.S.

“Today the focus is to buy our drugs and to get the message out of how the administration has turned it’s back on us,” Fruhling said. She and others planned to fly home Thursday evening.

Some of the seniors said they had watched the Wednesday night presidential debates and were John Kerry supporters.

“I am definitely not going to support Bush,” June Marie said, noting the drug issue was a large factor in her thinking.

Consumer Watchdog
Consumer Watchdoghttps://consumerwatchdog.org
Providing an effective voice for American consumers in an era when special interests dominate public discourse, government and politics. Non-partisan.
Latest Privacy Videos
Video thumbnail
KCAL CBS: New Tool For Scrubbing Online Data
03:03
Video thumbnail
KTVU FOX: Protecting Your Privacy
04:02
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert — Don't Sign Uber's "License to Kill" Ballot Initiative
01:16
Video thumbnail
KX Television (KXMD): Surveillance Pricing Costing Consumers Big
02:01
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: Uber Says One Thing Does Another On Surveillance Pricing
02:38
Video thumbnail
KGO-SF (ABC) - San Francisco, CA: Bill To Ban Higher Prices Based On Phone Data
02:21
Video thumbnail
KCAL-LA - Los Angeles, CA: Personal Data Used To Target Shoppers
06:36
Video thumbnail
KCBA (FOX) - Monterey, CA: CA Bill Aims To Put An End To Surveillance Price Gouging
00:55
Video thumbnail
KLAS-LV (CBS) - Las Vegas, NV: Surveillance Pricing
00:46
Video thumbnail
KIRO-SEA (CBS) - Seattle, WA: CA Lawmakers Consider Bill On Price Gouging
00:51
Video thumbnail
AB 446 Press Conference
13:52
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: Surveillance Pricing
02:07
Video thumbnail
KTTV-LA (FOX) - Los Angeles, CA: Prices Are being Adjusted Based On Your Shopping Habits
03:42
Video thumbnail
KTVU-SF (FOX) - San Francisco, CA: Surveillance Price Gouging
05:49
Video thumbnail
KCAL-LA - Los Angeles, CA: Surveilance Price Gouging
03:17
Video thumbnail
KBCW 44 Cable 12 - San Francisco, CA: Meta Holiday Hack
03:25
Video thumbnail
KTVU-SF (FOX) - San Francisco, CA: Several Tech Bills Head To Governor's Desk
06:12
Video thumbnail
Al Jazeera: Google antitrust law trial US court says google is a monopolist, violated law
02:16
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert — National Data Breach
01:24
Video thumbnail
KTVU-SF (FOX) - San Francisco, CA: Calm App, Doordash Software Sued For Data Sharing
05:40
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: No Opt Out
00:49
Video thumbnail
KCAL-LA - Los Angeles, CA: Investigation Into California's Newborn DNA Database
03:39
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: Data Parasites
02:07
Video thumbnail
KCBS - Los Angeles, CA: California Biobank Stores Every Baby's DNA; Parents Had No Idea
04:26
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: Wall Street using AI
01:48
Video thumbnail
KCBA (FOX) CA: Clearview AI Is Creating An AI Facial Recognition Software That Violates Privacy Laws
00:35
Video thumbnail
KGO CA: Consumer Watchdog Calls Attorney General to Investigate Clearview AI For Violating State Law
03:06
Video thumbnail
KNTV-SF (NBC) - San Francisco, CA: Tesla Recalls Millions of Cars
02:29
Video thumbnail
Consumer Alert: Clearview AI
01:19
Video thumbnail
Californians Now Have More Power Over Their Data
01:07
Video thumbnail
KPIX CBS TV-5 San Francisco, CA: Your Car's Computer Could Be Tracking And Reporting Your Every Move
00:48
Video thumbnail
California Votes YES on Privacy- Prop 24
13:14
Video thumbnail
Rage For Justice Report Podcast- Prop 24 For Your Privacy
19:18
Video thumbnail
Consumer Watchdog Hacks Tesla
02:00
Video thumbnail
FOX KSWB: New Internet-Connected Cars Could Get Hacked
01:05
Video thumbnail
ABC: Kill Switch Report Highlights Widespread Hacking Vulnerability of Connected Cars
02:12
Video thumbnail
KTTV FOX: Consumer Watchdog Report Warns That Hackers Can Take Over Your Car
05:02
Video thumbnail
SPECNEWS1: Watchdog Warns Cars With Internet Connection Vulnerable to Hacking
00:37
Video thumbnail
KBCW: Connected Cars Pose Risk to Driver Safety Due to Hacking Vulnerability
02:31
Video thumbnail
ABC KGO: Whistleblower Engineers Warn Connected Cars Need A Kill Switch to Stop Hacking
02:10
Video thumbnail
KCAL: Alarming Watchdog Report Shows Connected Cars Are Vulnerable to Hacking
02:51
Video thumbnail
ABC KGTV: Report Says Internet-Linked Cars Are Vulnerable To Hackers
00:30
Video thumbnail
KTTV Fox 11: Consumer Watchdog Report Shows How Vulnerable Connected Cars Are To Dangerous Hacking
01:05
Video thumbnail
NBC: Watchdog Report Show Connected Cars Lack of Cybersecurity Put Drivers at Risk
03:38
Video thumbnail
CBS KGPE: Connected Cars Pose A Cybersecurity Risk
03:05
Video thumbnail
Fox WDAF: High-Tech Cars Put Drivers At Risk Of Hacking Interference
00:47
Video thumbnail
ABC WXYZ: Connected Cars Can Be Hacked Says Kill Switch Report
01:36
Video thumbnail
KTTV GDLA: US Senators Write NHTSA About Connected Car Concerns
01:17
Video thumbnail
FOX KPTV: Kill Switch Report Details Cybersecurity Issues With Internet Connected Cars
02:28
Video thumbnail
CBS LA: Kill Switch Study Finds Connected Cars Are Vulnerable to Hacking
01:41

Privacy In The News

Latest Privacy Report

Support Consumer Watchdog

Subscribe to our newsletter

To be updated with all the latest news, press releases and special reports.