Hidden panels, counterfeit bottles, fentanyl: A year of buying drugs in Mexican pharmacies

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Hidden panels, counterfeit bottles, fentanyl: A year of buying drugs in Mexican pharmacies
latimes.com

The tag on her white lab coat read “professional pharmacist,” and the framed health and safety certificates lining the walls behind her gave the drugstore an air of legitimacy.

That pretense faded seconds later, when she was asked for controlled medications — and got on her hands and knees to pop open a hidden panel under the counter. She rooted around for a minute and emerged with two sealed bottles.

“These are from licensed laboratories,” she said. “The problem is when you’re buying from a laboratory that’s not certified.”

One of those bottles — sold as Adderall — tested positive for methamphetamine.

In pharmacy after pharmacy in this Mexican resort city, workers offered similar assurances, but time and again the pills proved to be fakes. There were oxycodone pills that tested positive for heroin and over-the-counter cough medicine, and Vicodin tablets that turned out to be fentanyl. Pills sold as Adderall were sometimes methamphetamine or caffeine, and sometimes simply an appetite suppressant.

...

Aside from the glut of willing sellers and suppliers, another roadblock to reining in the sale of counterfeit pills in Mexico is the constant demand — often from Americans looking for medications that may be cheaper or easier to get than in the U.S., where opioid painkillers are tightly controlled and ADHD medications are scarce due to a years-long shortage. In recent months, several people prescribed ADHD drugs told The Times they’d purchased or considered purchasing their medications in Mexico.

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Sounds like an improvement, depending on how you look at it. Having experience with these types pharmacies going back decades, most used to just fill fake schedule II bottles with placebos, or worse, random Schedule III pills.

If you're already copping, or trying to, illegal prescription narcotics in Mexico, you probably already know what you're in for. You want to get high and you don't have a doctor's prescription.

Not saying this is good, just that it's probably not surprising or unexpected to the people most impacted by it.

You want to get high and you don't have a doctor's prescription.

Not saying this is good, just that it's probably not surprising or unexpected to the people most impacted by it.

Or scraping by, live near the border, need meds, and are just trying to save a buck.

Sounds like an improvement, depending on how you look at it. Having experience with these types pharmacies going back decades, most used to just fill fake schedule II bottles with placebos, or worse, random Schedule III pills.

Dying of an unexpected Fentanyl overdose is an improvement?

Prescription opiates and stimulants aren't expensive, when you have a valid prescription.

If this article was about the problem of counterfeit cancer drugs, or other non-narcotic medications, it would be a different situation, but that's not what the discussion is about.

While I ultimately believe that drugs should be decriminalized and legalized, that's not where we're at.

So, if I was an active drug user and in Mexico, I'd prefer to get counterfeit narcotics that actually contain narcotics, and not ground up Zoloft or sugar pills.

I'd also trust the QA at shady cartel run Mexican pharmacy more than the average addict dealer in the states. Not a lot more, but enough to know which I'd prefer.