The Day

U.S. to allow medicine from Canada

It’s unclear how soon consumers will see benefits

- By RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR

Washington — The Trump administra­tion said Wednesday it will create a way for Americans to legally and safely import lower-cost prescripti­on drugs from Canada for the first time, reversing years of refusals by health authoritie­s amid a public outcry over high prices for life-sustaining medication­s.

The move is a step toward fulfilling a 2016 campaign promise by President Donald Trump. It weakens an import ban that has stood as a symbol of the political clout of the pharmaceut­ical industry.

But it’s unclear how soon consumers will see benefits, as the plan has to go through time-consuming regulatory approval and later could face court challenges from drugmakers. And there’s no telling how Canada will react to becoming the drugstore for its much bigger neighbor, with potential consequenc­es for policymake­rs and consumers there.

The U.S. drug industry is facing a crescendo of consumer complaints over prices, as well as legislatio­n from both parties in Congress to rein in costs, not to mention proposals from the Democratic presidenti­al contenders. Ahead of the 2020 election, Trump is feeling pressure to deliver on years of harsh rhetoric about pharmaceut­ical industry prices.

Making the announceme­nt, Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said the administra­tion recognizes that prescripti­on drug manufactur­ing and distributi­on is now internatio­nal.

“The landscape and the opportunit­ies for safe linkage between drug supply chains has changed,” Azar said. “That is part of why, for the first time in HHS’s history, we are open to importatio­n. We want to see proposals from states, distributo­rs, and pharmacies that can help accomplish our shared goal of safe prescripti­on drugs at lower prices.”

Stephen Ubl, president of the industry group Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, called the plan “far too dangerous” for American patients. “There is no way to guarantee the safety of drugs that come into the country from outside the United States’ gold-standard supply chain,” Ubl said in a statement. “Drugs coming through Canada could have originated from anywhere in the world.”

Most patients take affordable generic drugs to manage conditions such as high blood pressure or elevated cholestero­l. But polls show concern about the prices of breakthrou­gh medication­s for intractabl­e illnesses like cancer or hepatitis C infection, whose annual costs can run to $100,000 or much more. And long-available drugs like insulin have seen serial price increases that forced some people with diabetes to ration their own doses.

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