CHICAGO - After nearly a year of working diligently to secure
federal cooperation in providing Illinois residents with access to
safe, affordable drugs from Canada, Governor Rod R. Blagojevich and
Congressman Rahm Emanuel today announced Illinois will become the
first state in the nation to help consumers get a better deal on
their medications by giving them access to lower cost prescription
drugs available in Canada, the United Kingdom (UK) and
Ireland. Prescription drugs in Canada and Europe are typically
25-50% cheaper than in the United States.
Illinois will contract with a Pharmacy Benefits Manager (PBM)
to establish a clearinghouse of state-inspected and approved
pharmacies and wholesalers in Canada, Ireland and the United
Kingdom. The new system will be available on-line and will be
the first in the United States to reach beyond Canada to meet the
growing demand for affordable drugs, and to provide ongoing state
oversight of foreign pharmacies.
"We have taken every possible step we could think of to
convince the FDA, the Congress, and anyone and everyone who will
listen, that people across Illinois, and across our country, deserve
access to safe and lower cost prescription drugs,"said Gov.
Blagojevich. "We can't keep asking people to spend more money
than they have just to afford the medicine they need. We can't keep
asking the 500,000 senior citizens who live in Illinois and lack
prescription drug coverage to keep deciding "do I pay for my
medicine or do I buy my groceries?Enbsp; These are real choices
people have to make every single day. And it shouldn't have to
be that way. And they shouldn't have to keep waiting for their
government to help them. The federal government has failed to
act. So it's time that we do."
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In May, Gov. Blagojevich dispatched a delegation made up of
members of his staff, the Office of Special Advocates for
Prescription Drugs and the Departments of Public Health and
Professional Regulation to research whether Illinois could look to
Europe for safe and affordable prescription drugs.
The Illinois delegation met with representatives from
governments, pharmacies, wholesalers, parallel importers, health and
insurance funds, and professional and trade associations in Belgium,
France, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands and the United
Kingdom. They methodically assessed pharmacy practices,
manufacturing practices, warehousing and storage, and distribution
and dispensing processes and compared them with Illinois standards
and practices. The delegation concluded that Illinois could
establish a network of foreign pharmacies that would meet state
standards and provide safe medications at much lower prices.
Today the Governor released the report of the European study,
the findings of which closely mirror those of the Canadian
study. The experts found that Illinois consumers could save
money by buying their medications from European pharmacies, and
could obtain safe prescription drugs equivalent in every way to the
medications they purchase in the U.S.
"And so today, I am announcing that Illinois will become the
first state in the nation to give its citizens the opportunity to
purchase prescription drugs from Canada, Ireland, and the United
Kingdom. That means that the 12.6 million people who live in
Illinois will now have the opportunity to save hundreds, and in some
cases thousands of dollars, on the high cost of their prescription
drugs. We can't keep asking people to spend more money than
they have just to afford the medicine they need,"the Governor
said.
"Today once again the State of Illinois is leading the nation
in an effort to provide life saving medications at affordable prices
to citizens in Illinois as well as saving taxpayers millions of
dollars. It is time for the Senate to follow the State of
Illinois and the House of Representatives and pass legislation that
an overwhelming majority of Americans support. Governor
Blagojevich and the State of Illinois are joining the other states
and municipalities in a growing movement while Washington sits on
the sidelines,"said Congressman Rahm Emanuel.
The new program will connect users to a Canadian clearinghouse
through the internet or a toll-free telephone number, providing
country-by-country information on the prices and availability of
approximately 100 of the most common brand-name medications used to
treat chronic or long-term conditions, and enabling Illinois
consumers to order their drugs from the country of their choice for
25 to 50 percent less than the U.S. retail price. If all
Illinois residents used the program to purchase medications
available through the website, total projected savings could reach
$1.9 billion in the first year.
The Illinois import program will build-in numerous safety
measures to ensure the quality and safety of drugs dispensed.
The list of available drugs will be limited to those that are used
for long periods of time, and that cannot be spoiled during the
shipping process. Consumers will be able to order eligible
drugs for re-fill only, so patients and their doctors have had time
to review for unanticipated side-effects or interactions.
For new enrollees, the U.S. doctors can fax or patients can
mail in an original prescription to the clearinghouse where it will
be reviewed for appropriateness, and then turned over to a program
physician for review. If the program physician approves, he or
she will re-write the prescription
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and submit it to a network pharmacy. The pharmacy will
perform a final safety check to comply with local laws and
regulations before dispensing the medication. For pre-enrolled
patients, the medication will be delivered within two weeks of the
day the prescription and order are received by the pharmacy.
All medications will come from the PBM's network of state
inspected and approved providers in Canada, Ireland, and the United
Kingdom. The Illinois Department of Public Health and the
Department of Professional Regulation will work with the PBM to
inspect all network pharmacies to ensure they meet the state's
pharmaceutical safety standards.
In its initial rollout, the import program will be
targeted at the estimated 23 percent of the state's population,
including 500,000 senior citizens, who lack prescription drug
coverage and are forced to pay the highest drug prices in the
world. In the second phase, the state will waive co-payments
for members of its employee and retiree health plans who purchase
their medications through the website, saving the state up to $50
million. In the final phase, up to twelve months after the
initial launch, the import plan will be expanded to include other
state programs like the Circuit Breaker Pharmaceutical Assistance
program, as well as small businesses that don't offer prescription
coverage to their employees.
Last fall, the Governor sent a team of experts to Canada to
study the impact of importing prescription drugs from that
country. The group reported that importing prescription drugs
from Canada is not only safe, but in some cases, even safer than
purchasing prescription drugs here in the United States. The
Governor and his experts then traveled to Washington, D.C. to share
the results of their study with other experts and leaders around the
country, and met with members of Congress and officials from the FDA
and the Department of Health and Human Services.
In December, Congressman Rahm Emanuel (D-Chicago) joined
Governor Blagojevich in asking the federal government for a special
waiver to launch a pilot program to import prescription drugs from
Canada. After weeks of waiting for a response, the Governor
helped organize a class action lawsuit to give senior citizens
across the nation, the same opportunities that senior citizens in
states that border Canada have to purchase cheaper prescription
drugs.
"And as we've done all of this over the past year, the reality
is the cost of prescription drugs in the United States has not gone
down but instead has actually gone up. In fact, because of the
current policies of the federal government, we are going in the
wrong direction on the issue of prescription drugs,"said
Blagojevich.
Last year, the prices of the thirty prescription drugs used
most by senior citizens rose more than four times faster than the
rate of inflation, according to Families USA. And as seniors
in droves turned to Canada for better prices, at lease five major
drug makers began to limit supplies to Canadian pharmacies that
served Americans.
The drug-makers actions made it clear that Canada could not be
the sole supplier for an Illinois drug import program, prompting
Gov. Blagojevich to expand his review of foreign pharmaceutical
systems.
At the end of January, the state of Minnesota launched a
website that connects consumers to two Canadian pharmacies that were
approved by state inspectors. Wisconsin, New Hampshire and
North Dakota have since established similar sites.
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Despite its public opposition to prescription drug importation,
the FDA has not taken action against any of the states.
IllinoisEprogram will go a step further by including approved
European pharmacies in the network, and by providing ongoing state
oversight of the network wholesalers and pharmacies.
The new Illinois website and toll-free service will be
operational within a month.
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