Who does (prescribe them)? I was under the impression the affiliates sell drugs only after a "thorough (online) evaluation and bonafide (online) prescription," offered by the same company that sells the drug. Must have been an in-office physician visit I was thinking of.
Your impression is absolutely correct, but this thread is not run by, or contributed to by, bonafide Doctors. Therefore it is the wrong place to ask for medical advice. I would recommend that the martin12, or his friend, ask his/her Doctor if he/she is uncertain and then if his/her Doctor recommends a prescrption drug that he/she checks out our online offerings. He/she may find them both less expensive and more convenient that a trip to the Drug Store.
Hahahah! Hats off, Bob. So that I have it right - If anyone is uncertain, they should go to their doctor, then buy from your online drugstore. If anyone is not uncertain - as in, "I absolutely know I want to get ahold of major painkillers, or, I feel really depressed, suicidal, even, I know these drugs will cure me, and I don't need any doctor to tell me what's what; or, I'm so damn depressed that I can't get it up to get to a doctor" - I should just go directly to your drugstore, then somebody is going to take my word for it on a questionnaire, then give me the drugs, correct? This is your questionnaire, right: Medical questionnaire: Date of Birth: * Your Height: * Your Weight: * Your Sex: * Male Female Is your Personal Healthcare Practitioner aware that you are requesting this medication? * Yes No Have you been prescribed this medication before? * Yes No Have you had a physical exam in the last 12 months? * Yes No Please state the medical condition requiring you to use this medication IMPORTANT: your order will not be approved unless this question is answered fully: * Do you suffer from any seasonal allergies? * Yes No Please list in detail any allergies you have to medicines: * None Are you currently under treatment for any health problems? * Yes No Are you currently taking any prescription or non-prescription medicines: * None Please list anything in your medical history that you think might be relevant: * None Please list any significant family medical history: * None Will you be taking other medications while taking this medicine? * Yes No Please let us know whether you had any surgeries and what was the medical condition you needed surgery for: * None Do you agree not to take any over-the-counter medicines without approval from your pharmacist? * Yes No Do you agree not to take medication if you are pregnant, breast-feeding, or trying to get pregnant? * Yes No I have Read and Agree with the ready-meds-that-will-make-you-pee-your-pants-with-glee.com Terms & Conditions: * I have Read and Agree with the ready-meds-that-will-make-you-pee-your-pants-with-glee.com Refund Policy: * I have Read and Agree with the ready-meds-that-will-make-you-pee-your-pants-with-glee.com Notice of Privacy Practices: * By clicking the 'SUBMIT' button below, I agree to pay ready-meds-that-will-make-you-pee-your-pants-with-glee.com. So, if I answer right to all these probing, medically responsible questions, after paying the website, Voila! Drugs! Yippee! - is this about right? No meeting with a physician to go over anything, stuff like that? I'm glad to see that you do have the patient's best interests at heart, Bob. It is convenient to buy drugs online from reputable pharmacies - though they require that pesky meeting with your doctor, and follow FDA-approved practice (such practice specifically excludes "online questionnaire" websites). Here's the website to a few of those pharmacies: Rite-Aid CVS Walgreen's These pharmacies carry VIPPS (look for this seal), meaning they are "verified internet pharmacy practice sites" - the only websites considered bonafide by the National Association of the Boards of Pharmacy: Welcome to the VIPPS information and verification site of the National Association of Boards of Pharmacy. The National Association of Boards of Pharmacy (NABP) was established in 1904 to assist state licensing boards in developing, implementing, and enforcing uniform standards to protect the Public Health. Pharmacy boards from fifty states, the District of Columbia, three U.S. territories, eight Canadian provinces, two Australian states and South Africa make up the association membership. In response to public concern of the safety of pharmacy practices on the Internet, the association developed the Verified Internet Pharmacy Practice Sites (VIPPS) program in the spring of 1999. A coalition of state and federal regulatory associations, professional associations, and consumer advocacy groups provided their expertise in developing the criteria which VIPPS certified Pharmacies follow. To be VIPPS certified, a pharmacy must comply with the licensing and inspection requirements of their state and each state to which they dispense pharmaceuticals. In addition, pharmacies displaying the VIPPS seal have demonstrated to NABP compliance with VIPPS criteria including patient rights to privacy, authentication and security of prescription orders, adherence to a recognized quality assurance policy, and provision of meaningful consultation between patients and pharmacists. VIPPS pharmacy sites are identified by the VIPPS hyperlink seal displayed on their Web site. By clicking on the seal, a visitor is linked to the NABP VIPPS site where verified information about the pharmacy is maintained by NABP. The public is also welcome to access the VIPPS site at www.nabp.net to search for a VIPPS Internet pharmacy, which matches their needs. We at NABP hope you find the information helpful and invite your comments to continuously improve our service to you. Now, Bob, please correct me if I'm wrong - your sites, and those of your affiliates - none of them hold the VIPPS seal, do they? They only require an online questionnaire, correct? They require no other proof of medical care than answers to these few questions, correct?
Ah, thanks. So, the drugs you, Compar & Company sell are for no purpose, or "not a real problem, just for kicks"?
I strongly suggest you take a hard look at what your doing and search the web for what has happened to online pharmacies. I personally know people who are in prison and awaiting trial for doing th same thing UNLESS YOUR DOCTORS PERFORM AN IN PERSON VISIT WITH THE PATIENT. Even though your in canada you are advertising "US Doctors --US Pharmacies". The US Department of Justice has taken down 5-6 of these in the last year with people in the US, India, Canada and Costa Rica. If you are charged you will be extradited, especially with that Bush-loving Harper in office. Do a search on Christopher Smith and Xpress Pharmacy, he operated in the US and in Canada -- he'll be in prison for 25 years.
Dude that person Christopher Smith is one of the world's 200 worst SPAMMERS, according to the spam-tracking service Spamhaus. And At times, the company overcharged clients, supplied fewer pills than ordered, sold drugs returned by other customers and supplied different drugs than those ordered. And I only do SEO and work with real company, and make profit. And sell only FDA aproved pills.... That you refer is REAL SPAMMER. Second "Some Online Pharmacy are legitimate and some are not," All Worl know that
The reason Smith is in Prison is not because of spam. He is in jail because his facilitated the delivery of FDA approved schedule III or IV drugs based upon scripts written by doctors who did NOT SEE the patient. If a doctor does not phyiscally see the patient any perscription/order is ILLEGAL. Ask the DEA, ask the Justice Department. If your business/pharmacy issues Rx's without a doctor actually seeing a patient it is illegal and if caught you will be charged with distribution of a schedule III or IV drug, wire fraud, money landering and other charges that will land you in prison for 5-25 years.
sounds pretty scary. But what about online pharmacies that are legal? No worries there... Also is there a difference between simply providing an affiliate link, compared to opening your own online drug store? Thanks.
If a licensed doctor sees the patient IN PERSON and issues a prescription then a licensed pharmacy issues the medication it may be legal. Nonetheless I don't know how a online pharmacy would faciliate a nationwide doctor/patient exam. Some pharmacies in Canada ship the drugs but they require you to visit your doctor and send them the script. In a case that occurred in San Diego some "super" affiliates where also charged as they were advised it was illegal and continued to support it. DEA administrator said said this in April 2005. "Operation Cyber Chase is the first major international enforcement action against online rogue pharmacies and their sources of supply— today we’ve logged off some of the worst e-drug traffickers. Over the past 48 hours we’ve arrested 20 criminals from India, Costa Rica and the United States. These people were using the world wide web as a worldwide drug market. The Bansal (bhan-zell) organization, a Philadelphia-based international organization of internet drug traffickers, used 200 websites to distribute millions of pills globally. Operation Cyber Chase shut down this organization and its affiliates top to bottom. The criminal indictments also contain charges seeking forfeiture of 41 bank accounts valued at more than $6 million to divest these criminals of their illicit proceeds."
RXPayout who are the prime suppliers of the Prescription Medications that are sold on my web sites, and those of my many affiliates, are not a "rogue pharmacy". Everything that we sell, or do, is well within the rules and regulations set down by the FDA and other Governmental agencies. I personally earned in excess of $1,600 in the last seven days from my RX Payout affiliate site. And my 100 plus affiliates also had very substantial earning. Everything we have done is strictly legal and none of us is in jail or under arrest.
The term "rogue pharmacy is not my words, they are the words of the DEA. According to your own web site all you use is an internet questionaire -- no doctor ever sees your patients -- this makes it a rogue pharmacy. This is what the DEA has to say about a similar setup: "SAN DIEGO, CA - United States Attorney Carol C. Lam of the Southern District of California, United States Attorney Marcos Daniel Jiménez of the Southern District of Florida, and Peter D. Keisler, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Division, Department of Justice, announced that United States District Court Judge Jeffrey T. Miller today sentenced Mark Anthony Kolowich in federal district court in San Diego to serve a prison term of 51 months and forfeit substantial cash proceeds for his role in operating one of the largest Internet pharmacy schemes ever prosecuted. Kolowich, the owner of World Express RX, previously pled guilty to conspiring to sell counterfeit pharmaceuticals, commit mail fraud, and smuggle pharmaceuticals, and conspiracy to launder money. In a related case in the Southern District of Florida, Kolowich pled guilty to conspiring to import unapproved drugs into the United States, introducing such drugs in interstate commerce, and smuggling unapproved drugs into the United States. Assistant Attorney General Peter D. Keisler said, "The Department of Justice's increasing willingness to pursue court action and criminal penalties against those who are diverting and counterfeiting prescription drugs for profit should communicate our commitment to stop those who threaten the health of the public." Lam also announced that charges have been filed in San Diego against five other individuals in a related Internet pharmacy fraud case involving MyRxForLess.com. In announcing these charges and the Kolowich sentence, U.S. Attorney Lam stated that, “The simple fact is that when people use the Internet to obtain prescription drugs, they take a risk because the drugs might not be what they appear to be. Consumers need to be aware that many of the safeguards that exist for bricks-and-mortar pharmacies do not exist for Internet pharmacies." Kolowich operated an Internet pharmacy www.WorldExpressRx.com from which customers could order prescription drugs without having a prior prescription. The website directed the customer to fill out a health questionnaire, and pay a $35 fee for a doctor’s consultation. "The sophisticated criminal scheme carried out by the defendants in this case reinforces why FDA strongly advises consumers against buying medicines from websites and underscores the efforts of FDA's Office of Criminal Investigations to protect American consumers from counterfeit and unsafe prescription drugs sold over the Internet," said Dr. Lester M. Crawford, Acting FDA Commissioner. I would guess if you have 100 people selling these drugs for you, your probably already on the FBI, DEA, FDA radar.
I don't mean you personally of course, but RXpayout.com which surely doesn't have a pharmacy license. Christoper Smith and his 5 co-defendants go on trial October 10th for operating Xpress Pharmacy and dispensing controlled medication via the internet based upon only an internet questionaire without a doctors visit.
well, i must say that those pharmacies under investigation of FBI and FDA (the so-called rogue pharmacy) are those that sell controlled drugs, eg.: 1. phentermine 2. xanax and diazepams 3. barbiturates .... and so on. Those drugs are highly addictive, and mostly the buyers are drug addicts. So internet pharmacy is their way of getting those drugs. But the huge profit earned by the boss of those rogue pharmacies are making them forever rich that they do not even need to work to run a ferrari after coming out from jail. And I've seen so many pharmacy affiliates site closed down and they are not being shut down by authorities. but they just dont pay out to the affiliates and run away with your money, and start a new pharmacy program with a new name. So far, I've seen a few programs that can last long, but how long will it last? nobody knows. RXP is one of them, but for someone in this business for quite some time, they wouldnt use RXP just because there are someone that pays higher and more trustable. A final word to all pharmacy affiliates, just be careful when this above thing happens to you. And how much you earn can not be a guide whether it is a rogue pharmacy or not. Even the rogue pharmacy earns much much more. And the drugs that RXP selling are mostly safe, except a few borderline drugs: 1. Fioricet 2. Tramadol 3. Soma All of these are high abusable drugs.
HAH! BIG LIES! I signed p and now I am recieving around 15 Spam emails a day. I think these people sell your email address. All these spam email are for "male enhancement". BAH !