Maybe it costs more to put it in the pretty, "child proof," bottle and list all the precautions and reported side effects on the box. You know, "use as directed," "this bottle is not a toy," "do not place in rectum," "this package will support combustion if subject to open flames," - you know - important stuff like that.
That goes both ways -- I used to have a vet that would write rxs for my dog, for me to take to the regular, human pharmacy to get filled (for some specific medications, not all the time) because, she would tell me, she could give me the veterinary version, but it cost twice as much and was exactly the same as the human form, and this was saving me a lot of money (which I appreciated!). The pharmacist would look at me funny and say, "Who's Molly (X), and who is this physician??" And I'd explain Molly was my dog and Dr. ABC was the vet. They always acted like it was some big deal, but they'd fill the rx.
elkpark said:That goes both ways -- I used to have a vet that would write rxs for my dog, for me to take to the regular, human pharmacy to get filled (for some specific medications, not all the time) because, she would tell me, she could give me the veterinary version, but it cost twice as much and was exactly the same as the human form, and this was saving me a lot of money (which I appreciated!). The pharmacist would look at me funny and say, "Who's Molly (X), and who is this physician??" And I'd explain Molly was my dog and Dr. ABC was the vet. They always acted like it was some big deal, but they'd fill the rx.
My daughters cat is on prozac (She has kitty ADHD and anxiety, just like her girl) and it cost us less to buy the human version (generic) than it would for our vet to order it and provide it. Things are weird like that.
Our pharmacists laughed when she saw the script. She found it amusing.
elkpark said:That goes both ways -- I used to have a vet that would write rxs for my dog, for me to take to the regular, human pharmacy to get filled (for some specific medications, not all the time) because, she would tell me, she could give me the veterinary version, but it cost twice as much and was exactly the same as the human form, and this was saving me a lot of money (which I appreciated!). The pharmacist would look at me funny and say, "Who's Molly (X), and who is this physician??" And I'd explain Molly was my dog and Dr. ABC was the vet. They always acted like it was some big deal, but they'd fill the rx.
Haha...I once took a prescription for one of my chickens to a regular pharmacy. I am pretty sure that pharmacist will tell that story for many years to come.
hppygr8ful, ASN, RN, EMT-I
4 Articles; 5,212 Posts
How is it that 100 Glipizide 10mg tablets runs around $40.00 but if I buy it off the veterinary website it only costs $14.00. Same drug, Same Manufacturer, Same dose and I don't need a prescription to buy it.