Saturday, June 11, 2011

Let 1,000 Online Pharmacies Bloom?

In 2001, 18-year-old Ryan Haight ordered Vicodin without a valid prescription and had it delivered to his house. His subsequent overdose inspired Congress to enact the Internet Pharmacy Consumer Protection Act, aka the Ryan Haight Act. Designed to curb rogue online pharmaceutical companies, the act declared that no controlled substance shall be "delivered, distributed, or dispensed by means of the Internet without a valid prescription." Additionally, doctors must conduct face-to-face examinations with patients, sites must post truthful information about their locations, and it is now a crime to use the Internet to advertise the illegal sale of controlled substances. Nationpharmacy.com, the website Ryan used to purchase Vicodin, was shut down. DEA Special Agent Gary Boggs told BuffaloNews, "The Ryan Haight Act has pretty much eliminated the online business in the United States."

Turns out the DEA isn't doing as good a job policing "rogue pharmaceutical sites" as it might feign. A study released this month (PDF) by LegitScript, an independent verification and monitoring service for online pharmacies, has identified and listed over 1,000 online pharmacies that are still selling prescription drugs without license and are in violation of the Ryan Haight Act. Below, three key factoids from the report.

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Source: http://motherjones.com/blue-marble/2011/06/should-online-pharma-business-be-shut-down

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