Posted At Gazette.Net
BY : Douglas Tallman
Montgomery County officials are working on a plan that would allow all county residents to purchase cheaper prescription drugs from Canadian pharmacies, Council President Thomas E. Perez said Tuesday.
The plan would piggyback onto the council's effort to supply 85,000 county employees and retirees with north-of-the-border medications, said Perez (D-Dist. 5) of Takoma Park.
Earlier this summer, Perez was optimistic that the county could have a pharmaceutical supplier in place before the council started its August break. A deal has yet to be finalized.
The Canadian plan would supplement an existing program, Montgomery Rx, in which residents can take county cards to local pharmacies. Because they provide discounts averaging about 20 percent off retail prices, the cards can assist residents who lack prescription drug coverage.
Sharon Treat, executive director of the National Legislative Association on Prescription Drug Prices, said Montgomery's Canadian program would resemble ones in other states where government agencies encourage cross-country prescription sales to save money.
Treat said patients can save as much as 50 percent on the retail price of some medications.
The Montgomery plan would focus on brand-name drugs for chronic conditions.
The county spends about $70 million a year on prescriptions for its employees and retirees. A study conducted for the County Council last year estimated savings between $6 million and $10 million.


















