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CHEAP
GENERIC DRUGS
cheap
erythromycin
About Drug
Quality
The
Pharmacy
is a processing center
that receives all orders, payments, and prescriptions for
pharmaceuticals that are purchased from our website and
electronically sent there by website, facsimile, or email. The center
checks all orders for availability and accuracy, and matches up orders
with their corresponding prescriptions.
The center, located in Colombo, Sri Lanka,
is strictly a clerical and administrative processing office that can
be thought of as a virtual pharmacy. No pharmaceuticals are located,
stored, or shipped from there.
After this initial processing is completed, the resulting shipping
orders are created and forwarded for fulfillment to the wholesale
distribution center of a major pharmacy chain in India that operates
in excess of 70 retail pharmacies in major Indian cities.
Think of this distribution center as a regional warehouse and shipping
facility for a smaller Walgreen's or Eckerd's chain.
By agreement, the
distribution center fulfills and ships orders for our pharmacy the
same way it does for all of its retail stores. It pulls ordered items
from its huge warehouse inventory that are purchased in wholesale
quantities from the major drug manufacturers of India, and packs and
labels them for shipment to our customers.
The only way in which the fulfillment process for your order differs
from that used in filling orders for the retail stores is that our
completed, packed, and labeled packages are picked up at the
distribution center by an air courier truck, instead of being loaded
into the distribution center delivery trucks for delivery to their
retail stores.
This business model yields many benefits for our pharmacy customers.
All drugs, which are manufactured in India, are purchased from
large, established manufacturers, such as Cipla, Ranbaxy, and others,
whose plants pass regular inspections by visiting regulators from the
F.D.A.'s of the United States, Britain, Canada, Germany, France,
Spain, and other countries. Ranaxby has U.S. F.D.A. approval for 20 of
its generic products ….and it even owns a factory in New Brunswick,
N.J
Trained and experienced professionals supervise all phases of drug
purchasing and order fulfillment for our pharmacy as well as their own
retail pharmacies.
Your order is filled with drugs drawn from the same immense
inventory pool as that used to fill bulk orders from the chain's
retail stores which dispense thousands of prescriptions daily. This
assures you that your drugs are factory fresh, genuine, and of the
highest quality.
All of the drugs that we offer that are in the form of pills,
capsules, or tablets are machine sealed at the factory in 10 unit
bubble packs, and are untouched by human hands.
New York Times Comments
The New York Times, in an article in its December 1, 2000
issue entitled “Medicine Merchants” said companies “such as Cipla and
Ranbaxy Laboratories are reputable companies that make much of their
money manufacturing ingredients for American and European
companies.”, and, “70 percent to 80
percent of the key ingredients in American-made generic drugs come
from foreign suppliers, as do about 60 percent of brand name drugs.”
The Times article goes on to say “The large
independents, like Cipla, Ranbaxy, Dr. Reddy’s, Wockhardt and Sun
Pharma, already produce many generic drugs for export to America,
Europe and Japan, so they pass regular inspections by visiting
regulators for the United States, Britain, Germany, and elsewhere.”
.
The
Doctor-Pharmacist. The
pharmacy was founded by a physician M.D., now deceased, who
received his graduate Masters and Doctors degrees from Tulane
University in New Orleans, Louisiana, and practiced in the U.S.
The pharmacy is now
operated, supervised, and managed by the founder's family.
About many US drugs being made overseas. At their web site at
www.stopFDA.com Life Extension
Magazine reports:
"We did a search of offshore chemical synthesizers that
supply the active ingredients found in drugs approved by the FDA. As
we have revealed in past issues of Life Extension, a significant
percentage of drugs sold in the United States contain active
ingredients made in other countries."
Generic drugs in place of name brand drugs.
Generic drugs are the chemical clones or equivalents of brand named
drugs, stripped of the brand name and all of its promotional and
advertising expense and cost, but retaining the same chemical effect
in the body.
You have appointed your
doctor as the guardian of your health on this issue, so if your doctor
approves your use of generic drugs because he or she believes the
chemical effect will be the same as the more expensive brand name, you
should trust that decision.
What the AARP says about generics vs. name brand drugs. In a
press conference held April 22, 2002, John Rother, AARP's policy
director said "In most cases generic drugs are just as effective at
half the cost or less", and added that "Drug prices went up 17 percent
last year." Rother recommended the use of generic drugs whenever
possible, and the comparison of prices at different pharmacies, and to
avoid being fooled by the television ads that try to persuade you to
use expensive new drugs.
Our "prescription
only" policy. There are many overseas
pharmacies that will furnish drugs on demand to anyone, whether they
have a prescription or not, and many of them also specialize in
narcotics and controlled substances.
However this pharmacy will
absolutely not furnish drugs to anyone who cannot supply a copy
of a valid prescription issued by a licensed physician in the buyer's
country of residence. There are no exceptions to this policy.
Our policy regarding narcotics or dangerous drugs.
Even with a prescription, the pharmacy will not supply anyone
with narcotic drugs or controlled substances, such as sex hormones or
anabolic steroids. This policy is to avoid any possible involvement
with illicit drugs.
Why our drugs are so
inexpensive. World Trade Organization (WTO) treaties between
nations protect patents and trademarks. India is one of few nations
that selected a protection scheme based upon protection of the
manufacturing process (Process Patents) rather than using the more
common scheme of protecting the actual product (Product Patents).
As a result, Indian
pharmaceutical chemists can legally create, and sell worldwide, drugs
that are still patent protected elsewhere if they do so using a
process that creates the identical drug through the use of a different
process.
Therefore these drugs can
be marketed at prices that reflect their real manufacturing cost,
rather than a monopoly price that is set without regard to
competition.
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