Health
authorities warn buying prescription drugs is dangerous, but only
on the Internet
New research published in the August 12 issue of The Lancet has
found that more patients are buying prescription drugs on the internet,
which has led many conventional medical authorities to worry about
the possible dangers of online drug purchases. Mainstream media outlets
are reporting on the dangers of buying prescription drugs over the
internet, but are simultaneously implying that buying prescription
drugs at retail is therefore safe.
Physicians say many people turn to internet prescription drug purchases
because they either cannot afford to buy expensive prescriptions
through pharmacies, or they have diagnosed themselves with a disease
and begun treating it with drugs purchased over the internet without
medical consultation.
In the Lancet article, UK researchers reported the case of a 64-year-old
woman who diagnosed herself with chronic fatigue syndrome four years
ago and began taking prednisolone purchased from an online company
in Thailand. The woman recently developed steroid-induced glaucoma
and cataracts from taking the drug, and is awaiting an eye operation.
The FDA says it is only aware of a handful of incidents involving
patients being injured by unregulated online pharmaceuticals, but
acknowledges that the number of internet pharmacies is growing. The
Pharmaceutical and Research Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) say
the UK woman's case demonstrates the dangers of buying drugs from
foreign sources, and that patients should only buy drugs through
regulated channels.
Critics of the pharmaceutical industry say that PhRMA and conventional
doctors are upholding a double standard by condemning the dangers
of internet-purchased drugs, when the same drugs with the same dangers
are available at pharmacies at much greater cost. Natural health
proponents say pharmaceuticals have always been dangerous, no matter
the source, since more than 100,000 people are killed by prescription
drugs every year in the U.S., and 16,500 are killed by gastrointestinal
bleeding every year from taking over-the-counter painkillers.
"The truth is that buying prescription drugs from anywhere,
including a local pharmacy, is potentially dangerous," says
Mike Adams, a consumer health advocate. "Drugs purchased at
pharmacies currently kill thousands of times as many consumers each
year as drugs purchased online, and they injure over 2 million Americans
annually. But you don't see the FDA or the mainstream media warning
consumers about the dangers of buying from pharmacies, do you?" |