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06-25-2018 11:19 PM
DH has been taking prescribed time-released niacin for several years...insurance just changed a few months ago and it Is now costing him $100 for 30 pills...he takes one daily...today I ordered the same thing, different brand, for $14.48 from Amazon. How do drug companies get away with this? Outrageous.
06-25-2018 11:25 PM
That is a rip off. I haven't come across anything that exaggerated. I used to go to Walgreens for prescriptions until the work plan changed. Now we can only use CVS. I wasn't paying alot, but CVS was cheaper.
06-26-2018 12:53 AM
I had been getting 4 Amoxicillin that I take before my Dentist appt. from Target for
a number of years and it was always $4.00. Then they switched to CVS and the
last two refills were $10.78. I took a new prescription to Walmart and it was again
$4.00, with or without insurance. I had the same insurance that I had at Target so
how come such a big differance in price? Never went back!
06-26-2018 01:00 AM
well I am half done, my DD went threw metal &phycial
06-26-2018 01:10 AM
sorry but these dr.'s ger a kick back when they prescripts it's not just Drs. it's the perscription too. Everyone wins. Big money with the meds.
06-26-2018 01:38 AM - edited 06-26-2018 01:48 AM
I don't believe that physicans receive any kind of monetary benefit for writing a prescription. Taking a "kick-back" would be illegal in the State in which I live (and probably all other States). No pharmacist would risk his/her license with such a scheme, either. All medications are accounted for and recorded with the drug manufacturers, insurance companies and the State to ensure such transactions do not occur. There is a check and balance in place.
ETA: Price differences vary for the same drug when made by different manufacturers. Ask about it at the pharmacy if you feel overcharged. They may not have been able to secure the same RX from the same source as previously or in time to meet your needs. My pharmacy calls and asks if I'm need the RX or am able to wait a few days for them to order from a specific manufacturer. For a couple of dollars, I don't care and ask them to fill all prescriptions and deliver them at the same time for their convenience. Saves me a trip to pick prescriptions up and saves the pharmacy an extra trip to deliver the less expensive RX. Kind of an appreciative approach I take when dealing with my local pharmacy.
You can always call around for the best price before filling your prescription the first time. I believe drug companies raise their prices in November of each year.
06-26-2018 07:28 AM - edited 06-26-2018 07:30 AM
For many years my husband went to a doctor who along with whatever else she did (I forget) only monitored his meds. He was on quite a few for different things prescribed by his other doctors. Niacin was one of the things he took, think it had to do with his cholesterol. Anyhow at one point for some reason that I forget he changed brands and it threw something off in his bloodwork. I remember she told him it was important to stick with whatever he had been using prior as they are not all the same so he did go back to the old one and that got his readings back on track. I used to (he's since passed) do the over the phone ordering for him at a place called Bronson. Might have had second word in the name, Bronson Pharmaceuticals or Bronson Vitamins or something but definitely Bronson. But never any need for a prescription for the Niacin he took. And the price was not outrageous.
06-26-2018 07:50 AM
Having worked for doctors for many years, I know for a fact that they do not get kick backs for prescribing any meds.
As long as the pharmaceutical companies are allowed free rein on their prices they will continue to do so. The same with medical insurance companies.
06-26-2018 08:39 AM
Doctors don't get "kick-backs" but they sure to get perks, starting with the drug rep buying lunch for the entire staff once a week. Who knows where it ends.
06-26-2018 08:43 AM - edited 06-26-2018 08:46 AM
I use walgreens pharmacy. A mystery to me is - all my drugs are tier 1. My copay for a 30 day supply for tier one is $3. Yet, when I go to pick them up at the drug store each of my 4, 90 day, Rx drugs has a different co pay. Instead of $9 one is $8.98 - another $6 - another is $4, but that's metformin and I know it is really cheap and only one is the actual $9. When I ask the pharmacist she says she charges what the insurance co tells her to charge. When we used to snowbird to Pa. all except the metformin were $9 at the Walgreens there. SMH.
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