Canadian Online Pharmacies
Internet-based pharmacies operating out of Canada have gained much
business in the last few years. The ease of availability and
competitive pricing have lured many customers from the United States to
Canadian online pharmacies. As of 2005, of the more than 7000
pharmacies based in Canada, almost 270 were said to be operating either
completely from the Internet or were using a combination of
conventional and distance dispensing methods - including net-based
retail.
Most
of these firms operate from Western Canada and the industry employs
nearly 7000 people. While the statistics may not seem overwhelming, the
number of customers catered to by these online drug stores is quite
significant. Of the total sales of pharmaceutical products, mail order
drugs alone raked in upwards of $1 billion in sales in 2004. The online
sites serve an estimated 2 million patients in the US including seniors
and those without any insurance.
However, it has not been a smooth sail for the Canadian online pharmacy
industry. It had to defend itself against the charges hurled from many
quarters. Fears have been raised that Canadian doctors were rewriting
prescriptions issued by US physicians. The Canadian Online Pharmacy
industry has predictably denied all the allegations. According to them,
Canadian physicians often review the prescription given by their US
counterparts and do a double check on the patient's medical background.
In case of doubts, the Canadian physicians also revert back to the
patient's original physician based in the US.
The Federal Drug Administration has traced many companies selling drugs
online. These were selling drugs to buyers in the US by claiming that
such an act did not violate any Federal law and thus were completely
legal.
According to a study, it was found that some of the Canadian online
pharmacy stores were actually based in the US. These were operating
illegally and were providing drugs under the guise of being Canada
based online stores. Some US based pharmacies were also purchasing
drugs from Canadian firms and selling them in US.
Further, the shipping and handling of these drugs have also raised
safety concerns as some physicians in the US feel that temperature
sensitive drugs were being imported without giving due attention to
packaging detail. This could have serious implications for the safety
and effectiveness of the drug being imported. Production concerns have
also been raised in the US as some of these drugs may have been
manufactured in bulk and a compromise on quality issues cannot be
completely ruled out.
Now voices are rising in Canada itself to regulate the online pharmacy
business. That country is now planning to modify the Canadian Food and
Drug Act. There is a proposal to bring in an amendment that requires
Canadian physicians to examine the patient physically before giving out
prescriptions. This would also mean that Canadian physicians cannot
rewrite prescriptions given by their US counterparts. This move has
been criticized by the online pharmacy industry in Canada. The
oft-quoted reason being the loss of jobs that may happen in wake of
this amendment. The industry is also up in arms against being portrayed
as practitioners of unethical and unprofessional business practices.
Canada is also planning to crack down on pharmacies operating without
the requisite Establishment License. Under Canadian laws, such a
license is required for any commercial organization involved in
fabrication, packaging, import, delivery, bulk sale and testing of
drugs here. This law enables the government to trace the complete chain
of sale of the drug from the manufacturer to the user in case of an
adverse effect of a drug. It also enables faster investigation and
framing of charges.
Strange as it may seem, though there is some distrust among the general
US population for these pharmacy products, the number of online buyers
for drugs is increasing every quarter. The industry has witnessed
healthy growth rates in the past and unless Canada goes ahead and
regulates it, this trend is expected to continue at least for the
foreseeable future. US customers also seem to be aware of the fact that
in case of adverse effects, there is no legal recourse available as it
would be impossible to locate the seller of the drug. Buyers seem to be
lapping up these drugs irrespective of the general feeling that there
may be safety and other issues in purchasing them online.