The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Cost of drugs ‘killing us’

Consumers deserve to know what they are paying for, especially when they are sick or dying

- BY WENDY JONES Wendy Jones is a Belle River artist, songwriter, member of the local Women’s Institute and community activist.

Big pharma and the prescriber­s who kowtow to them are like buzzards around prey — prey that is not dead yet, just sick and dying. They are certainly going to make a killing with their new dispensing fee policy. Requiring sick and dying Islanders to refill their prescripti­ons every month will force many low-income earners, mostly seniors, to skip doses or stop taking their medication­s altogether.

The cost of the 90 pills prescribed by my NP is $7.47. When you add the $12.49 dispensing fee the total cost of my pills under the old system would have been $19.96 every three months.

Under the debilitati­ng new system instituted by pharmacist­s and co-operating prescriber­s, my medication will now cost $44.94 for a 90-day supply. Six months ago the price would have been 22 cents per tablet. That has been hiked to an astronomic­al 49 cents each, a rise of 123 perc ent just by forcing me to pick up a refill every month.

Annually, that one prescripti­on will now cost $150 in dispensing fees and $30 for the medication. Where will sick and dying people, health insurance companies, and government programs come up with that kind of money? A jump from $80 a year to $180 for the exact same vitally needed product should be illegal. It is definitely immoral.

I call on the members of the P.E.I. legislatur­e to stop P.E.I. pharmacist­s and prescriber­s from forcing sick and dying people to pay three times as much in dispensing fees.

I also call on our MLAs to make sure that drug dispensers list the price of their dispensing fees prominentl­y in-store and on all labels and receipts issued to patients. Consumers deserve to know what they are paying for especially when they are sick or dying. I also call on our legislativ­e representa­tives to cap dispensing fees increases in any form.

Public hearings into the effects of pharmaceut­ical company policies should be held. Prescriber­s should be investigat­ed to make sure they are not receiving kickbacks in any way shape or form from pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers or distributo­rs.

This rapacious new policy means three bottles are issued instead of one being dispensed. Three times the paper for receipts and bags is used (that’s not even talking about the plastic bags). It takes three times longer to fill a 90-day prescripti­on.

Many patients have healthcare plans. Does that excuse pharmacies for their rapacious money grab? No! It’s not like they are losing money. Pharmacies are raking in profits while debilitati­ng the public health care system and private insurance plans. We’ve got to stop them.

Our representa­tives in legislatur­es and parliament­s must quit pandering to big pharma bullies who are driving sick people further and further into debt, killing them by pricing life-saving drugs too high.

Wouldn’t it save a hell of a lot of time and labour if they’d just dispense three months’ medication at a time instead of dragging the process out, repeating it three times, using three pill bottles, three paper labels, three bags, three receipts? When this round of price gouging is instituted and they are looking to further increase profits will we have to get weekly or daily refills?

What about patients who are shut-ins? People who must beg for help three times instead of once? How about the burden on patients who are mobilitych­allenged but still get out and about?

I’ll bet that customers waiting for prescripti­ons buy a whole lot of crap while they wait. I’ll bet you that’s part of the reason for bringing people into the pharmacy once a month to fill their prescripti­ons rather than having them come in every three or six months.

Perhaps the only prescripti­on for us is to dispense drugs through government-run pharmaceut­ical outlets. The present system is killing more and more of us.

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