Los Angeles Times

Crossing a border for meds can save cash, maybe a life

Many get their pills abroad. Some swear by it but there are risks

- By Bernard J. Wolfson

In its effort to temper the sky-high prices Americans pay for many vital medication­s, the Trump administra­tion last month unveiled a plan that would legalize the importatio­n of selected prescripti­on drugs from countries where they sell for far less. But the plan addresses imports only at the wholesale level; it is silent about the transactio­ns by millions of Americans who already buy their medication­s outside the United States.

Americans routinely skirt federal law by crossing into Canada and Mexico or tapping online pharmacies abroad to buy prescripti­on medication­s at a fraction of the price they would pay at home.

In some cases, they do it out of desperatio­n. It’s the only way they can afford the drugs they need to stay healthy — or alive. And they do it despite warnings from the Food and Drug Administra­tion, echoed by the pharmaceut­ical industry, about the risk of contaminat­ed or counterfei­t products.

“The reality is that literally millions of people get their medication­s this way each year, and they are either saving a lot of money or they are getting a drug they wouldn’t have been able to get because prices are too high here,” says Gabriel Levitt, president of PharmacyCh­ecker.com, an online company that allows people to compare prescripti­on drug prices among internatio­nal and U.S. pharmacies.

For people with diabetes, the inability to pay U.S. prices for insulin can be a matter of life and death, which is why so many families look to Canada or Mexico to meet their needs.

Robin Cressman, who was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes in 2012 and has become a vocal advocate for lower drug prices, says that even with insurance she was paying $7,000 a year out of pocket for the two insulin drugs she needs: Lantus and Humalog. At one point, her credit card debt hit $30,000, says Cressman, 34, of Thousand Oaks.

While on an outing in Tijuana last year, she popped into a few pharmacies to see if they stocked her medication­s. With little fanfare, she says, she bought both drugs over the counter for less than 10% of what they cost her north of the border.

“I left Tijuana that day absolutely trembling because I could not believe how easy it was for me to get my insulin,” she says, “but also how little money it cost and how badly I was being extorted in the U.S.”

If you are planning to cross the border for your medication­s, or get them through an online pharmacy abroad, here are two things you should know. First: It is technicall­y illegal. Second: It is unlikely you will be prosecuted.

Despite the official prohibitio­n, FDA guidelines allow federal agents to refrain from enforcemen­t “when the quantity and purpose are clearly for personal use, and the product does not present an unreasonab­le risk to the user.”

Personal use generally means no more than a 90day supply. You should think twice before bringing in quantities larger than that because if authoritie­s suspect you have commercial intentions, you could land in legal jeopardy — and lose the drugs.

People familiar with the practice say you generally can pass through customs without much hassle if you have no more than three months’ worth of a medication, you declare it to customs agents and you show them a doctor’s prescripti­on or a personal note attesting it is for personal use, along with contact informatio­n for your physician.

Even in the worst-case scenario, an unsympathe­tic agent might confiscate the drugs — but not arrest you.

Ordering drugs online from foreign pharmacies also tends to go largely unchalleng­ed. Legally, the FDA can refuse entry of the package at an internatio­nal mail facility. “That does happen from time to time” but not often, Levitt says.

It is more common for shipments that do get through to be detained for several days pending FDA inspection. So, if you need to take your medication every day, be sure to build in a sufficient margin for potential delays.

A far bigger risk if you’re shopping abroad for medication­s is that you might not get what you paid for — and it might not be safe.

“There’s a lot of junk in the pharmaceut­ical world,” says Dr. Ken Croen, a primary care physician at the Scarsdale Medical Group in Westcheste­r County in New York, who advises many of his patients on how to buy drugs safely in Canada.

And there are plenty of rogue operators, especially in the world of online pharmacies. You will need to do a little vetting.

Before doing business with an online pharmacy, confirm it is licensed in its country of origin and that the country has strong pharmacy regulation­s, says Dr. Aaron S. Kesselheim, a professor of medicine at Brigham & Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Countries with wellregula­ted pharmacies include Canada, New Zealand, Australia, much of Western Europe and Turkey.

Also, check to make sure the pharmacy posts an address and phone number on its website. Experts advise against using online pharmacies that don’t require a doctor’s prescripti­on: They are more likely to cut other corners, as well.

A couple of websites do the vetting for you, using these and other criteria.

The Canadian Internatio­nal Pharmacy Assn. runs a site (cipa.com) that allows you to compare drug prices among dozens of pharmacies whose legitimacy it has certified. Its customers “tend to be people who live in the U.S., are on fixed income or low income and can’t afford the medication­s where they live,” says Tim Smith, the associatio­n’s general manager.

To buy through one of CIPA’s certified pharmacies, you must have a valid prescripti­on and submit a medical profile to help guard against adverse drug interactio­ns. The site also maintains a list of “rogue” online pharmacies.

PharmacyCh­ecker.com offers a similar service, linking customers to a broader range of online pharmacies abroad and in the U.S. Levitt, its president, notes that although importing drugs from overseas is a “critical lifeline” for many people, it is still possible to buy many medication­s affordably in the U.S. He and otherssay U.S. prices can vary significan­tly from pharmacy to pharmacy.

Santa Monica-based GoodRx tracks prescripti­on drug prices at more than 70,000 pharmacies across the U.S. and offers coupons.

Levitt also recommends asking your doctor if there is a viable therapeuti­c alternativ­e or a lower-cost generic drug. Recent research from PharmacyCh­ecker shows that 88% of the most commonly prescribed generic drugs can be purchased more cheaply in the U.S. than from Canadian pharmacies.

“Many times there is no reason to go internatio­nal,” Levitt says. “The drug will actually be cheaper here.”

‘I could not believe how easy it was for me to get my insulin, but also how little money it cost.’ — Robin Cressman, diabetes patient who bought medication­s in Tijuana

 ?? Spencer Platt Getty Images ?? A PHARMACY in the border town of Nogales, Mexico. Many Americans cross into Mexico to buy prescripti­on drugs at often much-lower prices. Bringing the drugs into the U.S. is illegal but rarely prosecuted.
Spencer Platt Getty Images A PHARMACY in the border town of Nogales, Mexico. Many Americans cross into Mexico to buy prescripti­on drugs at often much-lower prices. Bringing the drugs into the U.S. is illegal but rarely prosecuted.
 ?? Rene Johnston Toronto Star via Getty Images ?? AMERICANS Joe and Joyce Shannon traveled from North Carolina to shop for medication­s in Toronto.
Rene Johnston Toronto Star via Getty Images AMERICANS Joe and Joyce Shannon traveled from North Carolina to shop for medication­s in Toronto.

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