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consumers buying medicines by mail
Newswise — Of Americans who buy prescription
drugs, the proportion who purchase them from
mail order pharmacies rose from just under 9
percent in 2000 to just over 13 percent in
2005, according to the latest News and
Numbers from the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality.
During
the same time frame, the proportion of
Americans who bought their prescription
medicines from drug stores, slipped from 65
percent to 61 percent; from pharmacies in
clinics, HMOs, or hospitals declined from 15
percent to 13 percent ; and from pharmacies
inside supermarkets and super stores like
Target and Wal-Mart stores fell from 32
percent to 28 percent.
Who purchased drugs from mail order
pharmacies? AHRQ found that in 2005:
• About 37 percent were age 65 and older.
• Nearly 88 percent were white.
• Almost 87 percent had private health
insurance.
• Roughly 75 percent had at least one
chronic illness.
AHRQ, which is part of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, works to
enhance the quality, safety, efficiency, and
effectiveness of health care in the United
States.
The data in this AHRQ News and Numbers
summary are taken from the Medical
Expenditure Panel Survey, a detailed source
of information on the health services used
by Americans, the frequency with which they
are used, the cost of those services, and
how they are paid.
For more information, go to Comparing
Population Characteristics of Persons
Purchasing Prescribed Drugs from Mail Order
Pharmacies with Persons Purchasing
Prescribed Drugs from Others Outlets, 2005.
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