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What
are
the
risks
of
customs
seizing
online
pharmacy
orders
coming
into
the
US?
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What
are
the
chances
of
customs
seizing
online
Mexico
pharmacy
orders
coming
into
the
US?
Answer
-
low
and less
than
they
were
a
few
months
ago!
It
depends
on
how
conspicuous
the
packaging
is
from
the
Mexico
medicine
website,
and
whether
it
is
known
to
customs
at
that
port.
A
reliable
online
pharmacy
will
not
be
known
to customs.
In
the
unlikely
event
that
your
order
is
seized
you
should
be
sent
a polite
note
from
customs informing
you
of
this.
It
is
to
our
knowledge
unheard
of
for
legal
action
to
be
taken
against
individual
US citizens
importing
prescription Mexico
drug
for
legitimate
personal
use.
The
scale
of
the
use
of
online
pharmacies
in the
US
is
truly
astonishing.
Here
is
a
recent
press
clipping
from
south
Florida
on the
seizure
of
personal
shipments
from
online
pharmacies.
Customs
to
stop
seizing
low-cost
prescription
drugs
imported
from overseas
By
Bob
LaMendola
|
South
Florida
Sun-Sentinel
Health
Writer
October
4th,
2006
In
a
move
that
cheered
buyers
of
overseas
medications,
U.S.
customs
officials
told
members
of
Congress they
will
no
longer
seize
prescription
drugs
that
individuals
import
from
other
countries.
The
new
policy, disclosed
Tuesday
by
U.S.
Sen.
Bill
Nelson,
D-Fla.,
ends
a
controversial
practice
begun
last
fall
in
which
the
government confiscated
or
delayed
about
40,000
individual
medication
packages
at
postal
facilities for
international
mail,
including
one
in
Miami
serving
South
Florida.
U.S.
law
forbids
importing
drugs
from other
countries,
but
the
government
had
looked
the
other
way
for
years.
Then
on
Nov.
17
2005
,agents
began
intercepting
drugs
from
Canada.
Budget-conscious
seniors,
who
can
save
half
or
more
on
drug
prices
by buying
from
outside
the
country,
protested
loudly.
Customs
officials
told
members
of
Congress
in
an
e-mail that
as
of
Monday,
agents
would
no
longer
handle
illegal
shipments
but
would
instead
pass
on
information to
the
Food
and
Drug
Administration.
A
customs
spokeswoman
told
the
Orlando
Sentinel
that
the
Bush
administration
still
believes
drugs
from
outside
the
country
pose
a
higher
risk
of
being
counterfeit
or adulterated,
and
about
10
percent
of
those
seized
overall
have
proven
to
be.
The
new
policy
is
an
internal change,
spokeswoman
Lynn
Hollinger
said.
"We
just
decided
to
focus
our
resources
differently.
We
are
still
very
committed
to
protecting
the
American
public
from
these
medications,"
Hollinger
said.
South
Florida
pill
buyers
said
they
were
relieved
the
government
changed
course.
"That's
great
news,"
said
Diane
Cohen,
an office
manager
from
Boca
Raton, who
had
a
shipment
of
the
breast-cancer
drug
Tamoxifen
from
Canada seized
in
February.
"We
were
being
denied
the
right
to
purchase
medication
at
a
price
we
can afford."
An
estimated
1.8
million
Americans
save
money
by
buying
drugs
from
other countries,
especially
Canada,
which
sets
price
limits
as
part
of
its
national
health
system.
The
customs
drug
seizures
began
Nov.
17
2005,
two
days after
the
start
of enrollment
for
Medicare's
new
prescription
drug
program.
Federal
officials
said
the
two
were not
related,
but
Democrats
in
Congress
and
many
seniors
suspected
the
effort
aimed
to
scare
them
into
signing
up
for
coverage.
Nelson
and
other
lawmakers
pushed
legislation
that
would
halt
the
enforcement,
but
it
became
snarled
in
election-year
debate.
During
the
summer,
Republican
leaders
in
Congress
struck
a
compromise, saying
customs
agents
would
stop
seizing
drugs
that
individuals
carried
back
from
Canada,
but
did
not
address
mail-order
shipments.
The
language
was
written
into
a
budget
bill
that
the
House
and
Senate
passed
last
month.
Nelson
said
he
believed
the
new
policy
on
mailed
drugs,
coming
a
month
before
election
day,
was
a
response to
pressure
from
him
and
others.
Charlotte
Kammer,
owner
of
CanAm
RX
Discount
Drugs
in
Sunrise,
said
the
seizures
seemed
to
peak
in
February,
then
slowed.
Even
so,
she
said
a
number
of
storefronts
closed
this
year,
partly
because
of
the
seizures
and
partly
because
seniors
switched
to
the
Medicare
drug
plan.
"Some
people
got
scared
and
stopped
ordering.
About
5
percent,
I'd
say,"
Kammer
said.
"Now
there's
no
problem.
That's
the
best
news
I've
heard
in
a
long
time."
A
consumer
group
that
sponsored
drug-buying
train
trips
to
Canada
said
the new
policy
falls
short
and
called
on
the
Bush
administration
to
control
drug
prices,
as
Canada
does.
"The
U.S.
should
be
importing
Canadian
drug
policy,
not
Canadian
drugs,
so
seniors
don't
have
to
cross
the
border
or
rely
on
fly-by-night
Internet
pharmacies
to
buy
their
prescription
drugs,"
said
Jerry
Flanagan
of
the
Foundation
for
Taxpayer
and
Consumer
Rights.
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Phone:
866-439-4963
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