Faced With Unaffordable Drug Prices, Tens Of Millions Buy Medicine Outside U.S.
By Rachel Bluth
December 20, 2016 - Kaiser Health News
As drug prices have spiraled upward in the past decade, tens of millions of
generally law-abiding Americans have committed an illegal act in response: They
have bought prescriptions outside the U.S. and imported them.
One was Debra Miller, of Collinston, La., who traveled to Mexico four times a
year for 10 years to get diabetes and blood pressure medicine. She quit in 2011
after the border patrol caught her returning to the U.S. with a three-month
supply that had cost her $40. The former truck driver drew a stern warning not
to do it again, but got to keep her pills.
gI didnft know what I did wrong,h said Miller, 51, who now pays $120 a month
at Walmart for her five medications while she waits to join Medicaid.
Itfs no secret that some Americans regularly buy prescription drugs on the
Internet or while traveling abroad. But the popularity of the approach is
underscored by the results of a Kaiser Family Foundation poll
conducted in November. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent
program of the foundation.)
Eight percent of respondents said they or someone in their household had
imported a drug at some point, a figure that would translate to about 19 million
adults in the U.S. based on current
Census population estimates.
Even the proportion found in the poll may be low, said Andrew Zullo, a
clinical pharmacist and a doctoral student at the Brown University School of
Public Health who has researched the subject. gPeople are uncomfortable talking
about the cost of their own health care, and they donft want to admit they are
struggling to pay for their own meds,h he said. Some may also be reluctant to
reveal theyfve broken the law.
Still, 8 percent is far higher than in surveys conducted by government
interviewers, which suggested the number was about 2 percent in 2011 — though
the government survey focused only on purchases in the previous 12 months. The
Kaiser poll queried a nationally representative sample of 1,202 adults.
The Internet has made it easier for Americans to buy prescription drugs
abroad, frequently from disreputable sources, according to Jaime Ruiz, a
spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
The Food and Drug Administration has cautioned that many online pharmacies
arenft what they seem to be. An international
crackdown in 2014 found that many packages of medicines purportedly from
Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the U.K. contained drugs from other
countries, including India, China and Laos.
Zullo acknowledged that imported medications could be inferior or expired.
Some could be counterfeits.
But many medicines purchased from another country are the same as the ones
patients buy in the U.S.
When purchased outside
the country,
many prescription medicines cost half or less than they do in the U.S.
According to the FDAfs website,
it is generally illegal for Americans to import drugs into the U.S. for personal
use. The law isnft rigorously enforced, in part, because it is difficult to
monitor the entry of medicine in suitcases and small packages. But in 2015 the
FDA implemented a
rule that would give government border inspectors expanded authority to
destroy drugs imported for personal use at their point of entry.
In the poll, people who had imported medicines ranged from college students
in their 20s to retirees in their 80s. They bought medications to treat chronic
conditions — such as high blood pressure and thyroid problems — as well as acute
problems such as sinus infections and acne.
Amanda Mazumder, a 27-year-old graphic designer in St. Paul, Minn., was
stressed out by the murky legality of the situation when she tried buying birth
control pills while in college five years ago. gThat was the most difficult
part, trying to be an honest citizen but also getting an affordable
prescription,h she said. She couldnft afford to pay $150 a month for her birth
control, but found an online Canadian pharmacy that sold her a three-month
supply for $60.
Bobby Grant, of Los Angeles, has relied on foreign pharmacies for seven years
to get medicine for his partnerfs severe asthma. Grant, 38, travels
internationally for his job producing live shows. Each time hefs in Mexico or
France, he buys 10-packs of inhalers and 20-packs of nebulizer solution for a
fraction of what they would cost in the U.S.
His partnerfs asthma would require inhalers costing $300 a month if she
purchased them here. Grant estimates he saves at least $2,500 a year by buying
the drugs overseas.
gI love her to death,h he said. gIfll do whatever I can to take her stress
away.h