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National Boards of Pharmacy Finds only 4.2% of Online Pharmacies Are Safe

August 25, 2017
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The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) has just released their Internet Drug Outlet Identification Program Progress Report for State and Federal Regulators: August 2017, outlining the current state of fake online pharmacies that sell to U.S. patients.

Out of 11,688 Internet drug outlets reviewed, the NABP found that 11,142 (95.8%) were “operating out of compliance with state and federal laws and/or NABP patient safety and pharmacy standard practices.”

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JAMA editorial supports declaring the opioid epidemic a national emergency

August 25, 2017
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An August 23, 2017 editorial in the Journal of American of the American Medical Association (JAMA) supports President Trump’s stated intention to declare the nation’s opioid epidemic a national emergency.

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Don’t Let Unlicensed Pharmacies Dispense In Oklahoma!

August 24, 2017

  Don’t Let Unlicensed Pharmacies Dispense In Oklahoma! (Don’t live in Oklahoma?  Write a letter to your own Senators here.) Congress thinks letting unlicensed foreign pharmacies dispense in Oklahoma is a great money-saving idea.  It’s a dangerous and foolish idea. Over 20 U.S. Senators have co-sponsored legislation that lets patients order medications from unlicensed foreign pharmacies and ship into Oklahoma.…

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Health Policy Expert: “Why Cheaper Drugs Can Kill”

August 24, 2017
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Health policy expert Kenneth Thorpe weighs in on the dangers of drug importation in this August 23, 2017 editorial in U.S. News & World Report:

“…these savings could come at the cost of Americans’ lives. Legalizing drug importation would make it far easier for harmful counterfeit and contaminated medicines to enter the U.S. drug supply. At a time when illegal, counterfeit drugs already cause hundreds of American deaths every year, importation represents a reckless way to cut health care costs.”

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Deadly counterfeit pills in Louisiana

August 23, 2017
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Deadly counterfeit pills in Louisiana Since as early as 2015, drug traffickers have been selling North Americans counterfeit medications made from fentanyl, a dangerous painkiller 25-40 times stronger than heroin, and even stronger synthetic opioids like carfentanil.  More recently, pill counterfeiters are using the same equipment to manufacture fake medicines made with new, dangerous ingredients such as methamphetamine, isotonitazene, clonazolam and etizolam.…

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Bioworld: Importation a cliché, not a CAPA

August 21, 2017
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Mari Serebrov, the regulatory editor for biotechnology news site BioWorld, offered this opinion about drug importation on August 4, 2017.  

“On the surface, importing drugs from Canada seems like a no-brainer,” she writes, “especially when the Canadian version is virtually the same drug as the one approved by the FDA for the U.S. market – except a whole lot cheaper. But there’s the rub. How can Congress ensure that drugs imported from Canada are all that they claim to be?

While more than 40 countries have or are implementing security measures to protect their drug supply chain, Canada’s not one of them, Brian Daleiden, vice president of industry marketing at Tracelink Inc., told BioWorld. That puts importation – from Canada, at least – on a collision course with the U.S. Drug Supply Chain Security Act (DSCSA), which Congress passed in 2013 as part of the Drug Quality and Security Act.”

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Physician: Sanders’ drug proposal comes with serious costs

August 21, 2017
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The Daily Herald published this editorial by Dr. Terry Sellers about the shortcomings of drug importation as policy on July 25th, 2017. Sellers is a Utah-based physician specializing in addiction.

“… price is not the same as cost,” he writes, “In this case, cheaper prices will impose tremendous costs that would adversely affect the future of medicine for generations to come.” 

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Former Director of the U.S. FDA’s Office of Criminal Investigations Warns Against Allowing Drug Importation

August 21, 2017
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More than 60,000 Americans died from drug overdoses last year. Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid 100 times more powerful than morphine, caused one-fifth of those fatalities. Local law enforcement and health professionals are working at a feverish pace to prevent fatal overdoses, yet at the same time, some federal lawmakers have proposed legislation that would make it legal to import drugs that are not approved by the Food and Drug Administration into the United States from questionable sources. Such legislation would provide a gateway for international criminal organizations to import counterfeit prescription drugs and deadly illegal opioids, including fentanyl…

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Update On Fentanyl in Georgia

August 21, 2017
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The August newsletter from the National Drug Early Warning System (NDEWS) News describes how the Georgia Poison Center (GPC) played a crucial role in the early detection of deadly, fentanyl-laced fake Percocet in Georgia. NDEWS describes how a call from an emergency-room doctor triggered the process of identifying the cause of the poisonings and cases: “This call began a rapid…

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Former Florida AG: Importing prescription drugs could worsen opioid crisis

August 21, 2017
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Bill McCollum, former attorney general of Florida and member of Congress, wrote about the dangers of drug importation on August 8, 2017:

“Opening the door to increased prescription drug importation will just make it easier for smugglers to ship this dangerous opioid into the United States. For years, we have asked police officers and prosecutors to do more with less. There are few signs that austerity will end. Changing laws to encourage importation of drugs would only add to that burden.”

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