U.S. pharmacies
make tragic medication mistakes that injure or kill U.S. consumers;
but FDA keeps warning us about Canada
Walgreen's has been ordered to pay $21 million to the family of
a girl who was mistakenly given the wrong prescription drug at
a Walgreen's pharmacy. The girl cannot walk or feed herself and
was born prematurely. Not surprisingly, the girl is on several
medications, and when one prescription was filled with the wrong
drug, the girl ended up in the emergency room and, her family claims,
suffered physical and mental disabilities as a result.
I mention this story not to necessarily focus on Walgreen's and
this particular young girl, even though her story is tragic, but
rather to point out that while the FDA is arguing that drugs from
Canada are unsafe for Americans, they routinely fail to mention
the hundreds if not thousands of mishaps that occur each day in
the United States as pharmacies mistakenly give patients the wrong
drugs at the wrong doses -- often with horrific consequences.
There's no doubt that pharmaceutical mistakes are commonplace.
If you are a pharmacist or you know a pharmacist, they will no
doubt concur. Part of the problem, of course, is that doctors are
still scribbling prescriptions on pieces of paper rather than using
a modern system of communication such as a text messaging system.
Another part of the problem is that there is such a lack of pharmacists
in the United States, due to extremely high demand for prescription
drugs, that many pharmacists are forced to work unreasonable overtime
hours -- which impairs their quality control ability. If you put
a pharmacist on a work schedule that has them pushing 65 or 70
hours a week, you can naturally expect to see some errors as a
result.
The point here is that U.S. pharmacies are just as dangerous as
pharmacies in Canada or the UK or any other developed nation. There's
nothing sacrosanct about the safety of pharmacies just because
they happen to be geographically located in the United States,
and even though the FDA is fond of pointing out the dangers of
pharmacies located outside U.S. borders, it neglects to mention
that those exact same dangers exist at pharmacies right here in
the United States.
Another point in all of this is that it is well-known in the medical
community that prescription drug mistakes cause tens of thousands
of fatalities in the United States each year. This fact is not
even disputed by anyone who is up on the latest research. What's
even more shocking is that 100,000 Americans are killed each year
by the correct prescription drugs, and another 2 million are injured.
That is, even when a person's prescription is filled correctly,
with the right drug at the right dose, and they take it as directed,
they still can be killed by that drug, and in fact this happens
over 100,000 times each year, right here in the United States,
right now.
The big problem with all of this, then, is not that one young
girl was tragically harmed by a single mistake on a prescription
filled by Walgreen's -- the big picture is that our entire nation
is being subjected to what can rightly be called a chemical assault
that injures, kills, and even maims literally millions of people
each year, right here in the land of the free. With all that being
said, the entire FDA focus on so-called drug safety is really just
a distraction from the bigger issues. The FDA is claiming that
a drug is safe if it's the correct drug and if it comes from a
U.S. pharmaceutical company. What they don't tell you is that virtually
all prescription drugs are unsafe for human consumption. They all
interfere with normal human metabolism, and no healthy human being
has any need whatsoever for even a single prescription drug or
a single over-the-counter drug. |
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