WHITE PLAINS, NY — October 26, 2004 —In response to the shortage of flu vaccine in the U.S., PharmacyChecker.com conducted an informal survey of Canadian mail order/online pharmacies regarding the availability of flu vaccines for Americans. PharmacyChecker.com found:
- Canadian pharmacies do not sell the flu vaccine to consumers, but some operate affiliated clinics or have physicians that come on-site to administer the vaccine. Two examples, both of which are top-rated pharmacies by PharmacyChecker.com (www.pharmacychecker.com), are:
- DoctorSolve.com, which operates the International Travel Health & Vaccination Clinic near Vancouver and is giving flu shots to walk-in customers.
- LePharmacy, in Montreal, has arranged for on-site vaccinations by a physician starting November 1.
- Consumers should not try to purchase vaccine by mail because the flu vaccine is temperature-sensitive and must be maintained at a temperature of 2-8c during shipping and cannot be frozen.
- The relatively new nasal spray vaccine, FluMist, manufactured and marketed by MedImmune Vaccines, Inc, is not yet approved in Canada. It, too, has special handling requirements.
Visitors to www.pharmacychecker.com get pharmacy ratings, in-depth pharmacy profiles, and price comparisons on over 1,000 brand name and generic drugs. PharmacyChecker.com will soon publish its ratings and information in paperback as PharmacyChecker.com's Guide to Low-Cost Canadian and U.S. Pharmacies. The guidebook can be pre-ordered by calling 800-431-1579.
PharmacyChecker.com is privately held and based in White Plains, New York. It has no ownership in or from companies that sell or distribute pharmacy products. PharmacyChecker.com also publishes business-level reports that provide price trends and analyses on Canadian and U.S. pharmacies. To order a PriceTracker report or for private consulting, contact Gabriel Levitt, at gabriel.levitt@pharmacychecker.com (718) 387-4526.