Re: any GERD victims here?
Posted: Fri Mar 04, 2011 1:51 am
About time someone gave Canadian healthcare some love.KC Scott wrote:Rack Canada
About time someone gave Canadian healthcare some love.KC Scott wrote:Rack Canada
You rang?ucantdoitdoggieSTyle2 wrote:GED victims? :?
smackaholic wrote: canucks: go fukk yourself, ehh. we'll just counterfeit it.
I didn't say they were, you mouth breathing tard. I said you upper messicans and others use the threat of counterfeiting to get such a deal.Martyred wrote:smackaholic wrote: canucks: go fukk yourself, ehh. we'll just counterfeit it.
Canadian drugs aren't counterfeit, you jabbering imbecile. Learn the difference between "generic" and "counterfeit".
They are manufactured by the same multi-nationals that manufacture them in your banana republic.
You are a moron. Period.smackaholic wrote: you upper messicans and others use the threat of counterfeiting to get such a deal.
BaaaaaaaaMartyred wrote:
My primary care provider had me start with Prevacid then switched me to Prilosec OTC. The Prilosec works like a charm, even if I miss a day on the weekend. I think it was at little more than $20 for a one month supply over the counter. So my PA wrote me a script for the Prilosec and now I get three month's worth (by mail from the provider's mail-order pharmacy) for a $20 co-pay.KC Scott wrote:This is my second go round with this shit, first time was 5 years ago when it was first diagnosed and I thought I was having cardiac arrest.
What sucks is the shit they gave me 5 years ago that worked, Nexium, isn't covered by my insurance. I ended up buying Previcid OTC on the phamacist suggestion - saying it was the same thing (it's not). Finally went back in to the Dr. today - he told me to double up on the prescribed doasge of Prevacid and to go buy the Nexium from one of the certified online Canadian Pharmacies. I asked about how safe it was and he said plenty - since he'd been doing the same thing himself.
And damned if wasn't 75% cheaper than CVS - yea, it was a pain in the ass to fill out the forms, fax the Rx and wait 8-12 days for it to arrive, but $59 for a 3 month supply compared to $200 for one month's worth make it worth the hassle.
Rack Canada
Dude...seriously how much of that medical shit do you want to keep jamming in your body?KC Scott wrote:This is my second go round with this shit, first time was 5 years ago when it was first diagnosed and I thought I was having cardiac arrest.
What sucks is the shit they gave me 5 years ago that worked, Nexium, isn't covered by my insurance. I ended up buying Previcid OTC on the phamacist suggestion - saying it was the same thing (it's not). Finally went back in to the Dr. today - he told me to double up on the prescribed doasge of Prevacid and to go buy the Nexium from one of the certified online Canadian Pharmacies. I asked about how safe it was and he said plenty - since he'd been doing the same thing himself.
And damned if wasn't 75% cheaper than CVS - yea, it was a pain in the ass to fill out the forms, fax the Rx and wait 8-12 days for it to arrive, but $59 for a 3 month supply compared to $200 for one month's worth make it worth the hassle.
Rack Canada
Nice piece of work there Marty...way to out yourself as the true tard that you are, who stopped his day to prepare a chart and post it on the T1B message board. You personify the image of the little guy scheming over his keyboard, stopping your work to stroke your imaginary penis, and then hitting the submit key, submitting your masterpiece screaming, " These dudes are in my head big time, so much I made this chart to humiliate them ..."Bode motherfuckers".Martyred wrote:
Threat Level is now at "poptart"
I've been on it for several years. Mine seemed often to be triggered by carbs. A nice piece of bread before dinner at a restaurant would have me in agony. I don't care how long I have to take it since it works 100% of the time.KC Scott wrote:Goobs - good info. It sounds like you're on it forever then?
When mine first happened 5 yrs. ago was on the Nexium a month then it went away - so stopped the meds.
My cardiologist said he's on it daily for 10 yrs now.
didn't read the whole thing, but read enough to gather than drug research is akin to playing the lottery. the risks are off the chart, which means that the rewards have to be off the charts as well or no one would risk investing in it.88 wrote:Educate me. How ridiculously long are the U.S. patent "lengths" (I assume you intended "terms") these days? And I assume you realize that patent terms in the United States are shorter now than they were in 1995, in many cases. And then explain the difference in patent terms between the United States and Canada.KC Scott wrote:No.88 wrote: If you let Canada set an artificially low price for pharmaceuticals and then permit those low cost drugs to be shipped into the United States, there would be no way for the pharmaceutical companies to obtain a return on their investment. This would reduce the incentive to engage in costly research. And it would likely spell the end of new pharmaceuticals.
That speil is the same thing the lobby has been spewing at congress for 30 some years to keep the patent lengths ridiculously long and costs ridiculously high.
Most R&D is done by small labs with either grant money or private investment equity. Once the drug makes it's way through FDA approval - then Big Pharma comes in and buys the product or lab.
*Bwa @ Marty's chart
And once you've handled those chores, maybe you can refute this:
http://www.rsc.org/chemistryworld/Issue ... Equity.asp