Posted At Naples News
BY : Will Lester
Southwest Floridians and other Americans have been happy to buy their prescription drugs from Canada. Customers do so because they can save money, and they can make and receive orders from the convenience and comfort of their homes via the U.S. mail.
Now, prescriptions coming into Southwest Florida from Canada have been halted, without warning.
How would you like it if your important medicines suddenly were not available or at least at a price you could afford?
Late last week, local journalists and politicians as high ranking as U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson did not know for sure what happened though Nelson led the speculation that the drugs were being seized at the U.S.-Canada border by U.S. Customs, on orders from the Bush administration. Conspiracy theorists said the Canada connection poses a threat to the successful launch of a Medicare prescription program which by some accounts is awkward, confusing and still expensive.
The way to win acceptance of this or any other new government program is for that program to be user-friendly. The government can't simply assure success by wiping out the competition. Or should we say shouldn't simply assure success by wiping out the competition?
Canada-connection clients and other Americans deserve answers. The story behind why and how medicines are no longer flowing freely from Canada to the United States can't be that complicated.


















