Should prescriptions cross borders?
The U.S. cannot solve its "Medicare donut hole" through
Canada's back door. That's the conclusion of a new health care
paper published by the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies (AIMS). It
points out that as Americans head into an election year, drug
re-importation will likely become an issue, particularly with several
states actively promoting the re-importation of prescription drugs from
Canada as a method to control Medicare costs.
"We should be concerned when American politicians start using
re-importation of Canadian drugs as a political smokescreen. A policy of
controlling U.S. drug costs by shipping drugs north to Canada and hoping
that they will still be cheap when they come back into the U.S. is on a
par with asking the Tooth Fairy to provide a national dental service on
the grounds that it will be selffinancing," writes author Brian
Ferguson, AIMS Fellow in Health Care Economics and a professor of
economics at the University of Guelph. To read the complete report,
visit www.aims.ca.
Atlantic Institute for Market Studies
COPYRIGHT 2007 Chemical Institute of
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.