This is from the ABC TV station in Detroit.  I'm assuming that California 
is similar.

http://www.detnow.com/news/0207221204.html

I had no idea that there could be that much difference in prescription 
drug prices.  If you pay for your own prescription drugs, you really need 
to read this.

Prescription Drugs 
Reported by Steve Wilson 
Web produced by Kelly Reynolds 

Channel 7's Steve Wilson takes a look at how much your pharmacy is 
charging you for prescription drugs. 

If you're one of the millions of Michiganders who have to pay out of your 
pocket for the prescription drugs you need, hold onto your wallet. Action 
News Chief Investigative Reporter Steve Wilson has the story your 
neighborhood drugstore doesn't want you to see. 

Alan Greenspan testified on Capitol Hill bemoaning what he called 
"infectious greed" that has gripped much of America's business community. 
You knew about it at Enron, you've heard of Worldcom, Kmart and the 
others...but even down at your local pharmacy on the corner, when it 
comes to pricing? 

Greg Pabb may not be the last honest man in the drugstore business but I 
didn't find many like him in my investigation of pharmacies throughout 
Metro Detroit...a local businessman with the courage to confess what he 
admits is nothing less than price gouging rampant at all kinds of 
drugstores all across Metro Detroit and beyond. 

Now we're not talking about the skyrocketing cost of brand name drugs 
which year after year make the American pharmaceutical industry richer, 
nor the fact that Americans can cross the border into Canada and buy the 
same U.S. made drugs for a fraction of the cost. No, we're talking about 
the drugs we're promised will save us lots of money. How to avoid paying 
too much for prescriptions? 

Pharmacists all agree generic versions of name-brand drugs give you the 
same medicinal benefit at a tiny fraction of the cost of their brand-name 
equivalents. 

But the truth is if you're like these folks and paying for your own 
prescriptions because Medicare doesn't cover it, or you don't have a job 
that gives you health insurance, or even if you do but your insurance 
doesn't cover drugs, you may be saving some, but what your friendly 
pharmacist doesn't tell you? He's putting the lion's share of the savings 
right into his own pocket and hoping you never find out. It's a fact the 
industry vehemently denies. 

But that's exactly where we found it. It's a secret every insider seems 
to know but virtually nobody wants to tell. 

We went to store after store after store where a prescription for a 
generic that costs the pharmacy only about $2 is being sold to many of 
you for as much as $100, despite their denials. 

A Closer Look at Cost 

Prescription drug prices, they're the fastest growing segment of health 
care costs today, and now we're learning it's not only the big drug 
makers reaping sky-high profits, local drugstores encouraging you to buy 
lower-cost generic drugs are quietly keeping most of the savings for 
themselves. 

Take Vasotec, which many people need to treat their high blood pressure 
and heart problems. But now the generic version called Enalapril Maleate 
is also available. 

The shape may be different but it goes down just as easy, and instead of 
spending $76 on a one-month supply of the name-brand Vasotec, wouldn't 
you be pretty happy if somebody behind the pharmacy counter at CVS 
suggested you buy the generic for only $61? ...And buying these got you a 
20% savings of $15...only guess what the friendly pharmacist at CVs never 
tells? That generic the pharmacist recommended and sold you for $61 has a 
true wholesale cost of less than $6...and CVs probably pays even less for 
it. 

While the markup on Vasotec is only minimal, CVs marks up the generic by 
a good 921%. And CVs is by no means alone. The markup at Walgreens is 
only a tiny bit less. Walgreens in Oak Park sells the same prescription 
for $58.19. 

Some of the independents we checked seemed even greedier. At Birmingham 
drug? The cash price was about $68...and even though it says Save On 
Pharmacy, we found Pharmacist Pabb was the one saving the most by 
charging what he now admits is an "unconscionable markup." 

Now, we heard them singing the same song at lots of Motown drugstores 
where the pharmacists claim the big insurance companies are to blame for 
this because Blue Cross, and the others, just won't pay enough when 
insured people need medication. 

In Lansing, Bill Knox speaks for the American Association of Retired 
Persons, whose members are among those hardest hit by what he says are 
these unconscionable markups. 

Insurers like Blue Cross do save millions when their members choose 
generics because the big players keep an eagle eye on the true cost of 
drugs. 

Franz Neibrecht at the Michigan Pharmacists' Association says Blue Cross 
sometimes pays the pharmacy so little on some drugs, it's members 
sometimes have a hard time making any profit...A claim denied by Richard 
Cole of Blue Cross Blue Shielf of Michigan, who says there's just never 
any excuse for unethical, if not illegal, markups to people not covered 
with a prescription plan. 

Generic Prozac is an even better example of what so many druggists are 
quietly doing to those who can least afford and have no help to pay for 
the prescriptions they need. A 30-day supply of the generic Prozac is a 
prescription that costs drugstores just $2.16 or less. But when a month's 
supply of the name-brand Prozac itself sells for about $100, drugstores 
like Heritage Pharmacy in Allen Park sell the generic for $92.24...and 
tell you "you're still saving a few bucks." 

And now don't focus your anger on Gregory Papp just because he's honest 
enough to admit it...over here at Birmingham Drug, the $2.16 generic 
Prozac called Fluoxetine has been fetching $89.59. That's a markup of 
more than 4,000% for you math fans out there. And Walgreen's is not that 
far behind at $74.49. CVs and Rite Aid both collect $72.99. 

Mr. Didur, who works for a corporation that claims to be committed to the 
highest level of integrity in every aspect of its business, was kind 
enough to do another price check...but no happier with the result. 

The truth is no matter where we went, from the big chain drug stores to 
the independent, to the pharmacies at Krogers and Farmer Jacks, even to 
the so-called discounters like Meijer and WalMart and Kmart, too, we 
found to one degree or another, much if not most of the potential savings 
on generics are going into the till at the pharmacy. 

It's true on the generic form of Zantac, the popular ulcer drug that 
costs $7.50 wholesale but has been sold for more than $127 in Birmingham 
where owner Bill Krasnick told me affluent customers can afford to pay a 
little more...and Atenolol, another blood pressure drug, that costs less 
than $2 but is selling for as much as $25.49...and the generic brand of 
Pepcid, the popular heartburn medication, a $5 prescription that's been 
bringing well over $100 at a couple of those places where the pharmacists 
believe the market will bear it. Is their anybody we found NOT cashing 
in? 

Martin Peltz manages the pharmacy at Costco and on each and every one of 
the drugs we checked, it was the pharmacy at Costco that was not only 
cheaper but dramatically far and away cheaper than everyone across the 
Metro area. While that other pharmacy is charging $92 for generic Prozac, 
Costco is selling it for $9. When the chain stores sell generic Pepcid 
for close to $100? Costco is dispensing it for only about $12. 


http://www.detnow.com/news/020925-drugchart.html



Thomas Mayer

********************************************************
My knees are healed.  I'm walking and biking again.

I'm now actively seeking technical employment.  My resume
is on my web site;

http://www.geocities.com/thommayer









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