Quiet resurgence: Americans coming north to fill prescriptions on the rise again

It was Tara Saunders's dermatologist who first suggested she drive across the Canadian border to pick up her medication last year.

The dermatologist called in the prescription to Mark's Marine Pharmacy in Vancouver. The 20-minute drive from Blaine, Wash., saved Saunders $300 US a month.

"It's ridiculous what they charge for medications down here," Saunders said.

She isn't the only one making the trek north.

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Shutterstock

Earlier this month, a group from Minnesota, calling themselves the Caravan to Canada, made a trip to Ontario to buy insulin at a tenth of the U.S. price.

While crossing the border to buy prescription drugs is nothing new, pharmacists are seeing a quiet resurgence of the practice in recent years.

But how Americans are actually able to get a valid Canadian prescription varies.

Right now, it doesn't impact Canada's health-care system or supply, but, as the U.S. looks at legalizing the commercial importation of drugs, pharmacists in both countries worry that will only create more problems.

Quinn Nystrom
Quinn Nystrom

"There's always potential for disruption of the Canadian supply, and that would be most acutely felt by Canadians who are trying to access medications that were earmarked for Canada," said Barry Power, a director with the Canadian Pharmacists Association.

"So without sounding alarmist, it's something that we need to consider."

The reason prescription drugs cost less in Canada is because a federal agency sets the maximum price a company can charge for patented drugs.

In the U.S., drug companies are allowed to decide.

Jordan Rosenblatt works with Mark's Marine Pharmacy in Vancouver, roughly 40 kilometres from the U.S. border.

"The prices are absurd," he said. "Quite frankly, when we hear the prices, I often wonder how people would really afford it if it wasn't for options like us."

Geoffroy Legault-Thivierge, spokesperson for Health Canada, said in an email that the department is monitoring the situation in the U.S.

"Collaborative efforts among implicated parties would be important in addressing any potential adverse impacts on the drug supply in Canada that may arise from increased cross-border trade," Legault-Thivierge said.

"Canada has one of the most stringent drug approval systems in the world, which is focused on the quality and safety of products destined for the Canadian market. Health Canada is not, however, responsible for ensuring the quality and safety of prescription drugs exported to the U.S."

In order for a pharmacist to fill a prescription in Canada, it must be written by a physician licensed in Canada — meaning there are three main ways a U.S. citizen can get a valid prescription.

They can visit a walk-in clinic, or may even have a family doctor in Canada, and pay for the visit out of pocket.

Doctors with dual medical licences

There are also doctors who hold dual medical licences, like Dr. Carl Flynn in Caribou, Maine, which is located on the New Brunswick border.

Flynn, a Canadian-trained physician, said he uses his dual licence every day.

"It's kind of waxed and waned over the years how much people have requested to get prescriptions in Canada," Flynn said. "But definitely in the last five years it's increased."

Most of his patients are elderly and many have never crossed the border.

Regis Duvignau/Reuters
Regis Duvignau/Reuters

"It's a foreign country to them and it's not something they've ever even fathomed," he said.

"And then there's another portion of people that are staunchly patriotic and feel that they're American and they should be getting their prescriptions here."

But he said usually when they explore the cost difference, they decide it's worthwhile to make the trip.

The College of Physicians and Surgeons of New Brunswick offers a border-area licence for doctors in Quebec, Nova Scotia, P.E.I. and Maine. It must be renewed every year.

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Shutterstock

Ed Schollenberg, the college's registrar, said it has about 40 physicians who are licensed in New Brunswick practising in Maine.

He said he doesn't know how many Americans are crossing into New Brunswick to buy prescription drugs.

But the most common way Americans can get a valid prescription is by getting it from a U.S. doctor and having it co-signed by a Canadian physician.

Co-signing has been deemed unethical by some regulatory bodies because, in some cases, the Canadian doctors weren't seeing or even speaking to these patients.

Rosenblatt said at his pharmacy in Vancouver, there are a number of doctors who work with them to serve American patients.

"They check the medical profile to ensure that it's the right medication, there's no interactions with other medications, that it's properly suited and, assuming it is, they will rewrite them a new prescription," he said.

At Mark's Marine Pharmacy, none of this is done online. Rosenblatt said it's either over the phone or in person.

But online pharmacies do exist in Canada, and so do their illegitimate counterparts posing as a Canadian pharmacy.

"There are reports in nearly every state of somebody receiving a counterfeit drug," said Norman Tomaka, spokesperson for the American Pharmacists Association.

'It's unsafe because it's fragmented'

The concern for patients isn't just about the legitimacy of the drugs. It's also about drug interactions and the overall picture of a patient that gets lost when another physician, who doesn't know the patient, gets involved.

"It's unsafe because it's fragmented," Tomaka said.

"Allowing for open drug importation to our northern neighbour would increase the likelihood of patient safety lapses and reduce the patient-pharmacist connection in helping patients properly use their medicines."

In February, the American Pharmacists Association and Canadian Pharmacists Association issued a joint statement opposing federal legislation allowing for importation of prescription drugs in Canada.

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Shutterstock

Tomaka, who is also a clinical consultant pharmacist in Florida, said he once had an elderly person come into his pharmacy in tears. She was unable to afford her antidepressants, so she sent away to Canada to purchase them.

She failed to tell the online pharmacy about another drug she was taking for pain management. They sent her a slightly different version of the drug she was on, which lowers a person's seizure threshold — something her pain-management drug also did.

"She told me that three nights prior to that she had a seizure she went to the emergency room," Tomaka said.

He was then able to work with her and her physician to bring down her dosage of the pain medication and switch to a more affordable drug in the U.S.

"All that work I did, I loved doing," he said.

"But that process could never, ever have taken place by her taking a piece of paper and mailing it to the Canadian pharmacy."

Submitted by Norman Tomaka
Submitted by Norman Tomaka

He said if it was mostly doctors with dual licences writing the prescriptions, that would alleviate many of the pharmacists' concerns.

"Is that common? Heck no. I would venture to guess that that is so uncommon that it's a border-state phenomena," he said.

"I don't think you see a lot of dual-citizen physicians wanting, out of the kindness of their heart, to add more work."

But this, Tomaka said, would not deal with the bigger issue.

"We've got a drug-pricing problem in United States and we are not addressing it at all."

The Associated Press
The Associated Press

With no solution in sight, the trickling in of Americans is likely to continue.

"It really speaks to the desperation that people are facing in the U.S. trying to deal with the cost of health care," said Power.

"I think there needs to be some movement from the federal government to make sure that the drug supply chain for Canadians is not disrupted through these mechanisms."

For now, Flynn will continue sending his desperate patients north.

"I don't think necessarily that the Canadian government is all that happy with a lot of Americans going across the border," he said.

"So I expect at some point there's going to be some roadblock or red tape put in place for Americans to get across, but in the last 25 years it hasn't happened yet."