February 14, 2012
Published: 1 Jul 09 15:42 CET | Double click on a word to get a translation
Online: http://www.thelocal.se/20396/20090701/
Sweden’s state-run pharmacy monopoly ended on Wednesday, paving the way for new entrants into the market for drug sales and for the eventual sale of non-prescription drugs in other retail outlets.
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fin
adjective
Fin means anyhting from sweet to proper. When someone says, Du är så fin it's quite a compliment.
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I do wonder if Swedish rules will prevent a single pharmacist from "serving" several customers at once with the help of unqualified assistants???
The biggest change will probably come from better opening hours, more convenient locations and selling many more non-pharmacy items like makeup etc..
i know there will be a flood of over the counter meds,like you guys stated.i hope sweden will regulate this and keep the good meds on the market. there are so many cheap and fake meds. i will pay more for meds that the state provides than cheaper meds by these so called drug companies!
The ball is still in the hands of the gov’t to reconcile the interest of the people and, those business men who are going to buy the pharmacies and enter in to the industry through strict regulation .Otherwise it will even be the loser in the next ......
First prices will drop, then quality will suffer , the governing bodies will not have enough staff to protect the consumer.
The trafficking of expired or fake drugs, repackaged and sold back, is already a big problem in Europe, it has been so in the US and Asia.
Many stores will be on their own or part of a larger chain like Boots, ICA, etc.
The Apoteket staff, is trained, educated, not always super friendly, but they know, they recommend and provide advice as needed, the governance in place is very stern. From now on, it will be a free for all, profits and margins not the best interest of the consumer!
We are going back to the wild west, maybe one day not so far away your girlfriend is taking birth control pills bought at one of this new shops owned by ACME AL whatever, 9 months later, you realize she was taking talcum powder courtesy of thugs in Bulgaria making counterfeit pills.
If you buy from a legitimate retailer, and you're not going to the local african fruit market to buy birth control... I highly doubt your paranoid scenarios will come true.
Comparing what Sweden's drug market will be like under this to Asia is bit far fetched. And in the US, fake drugs are not a problem... I have no idea where you get your information from. Picking one or two stories out of the news does not demonstrate a wide-spread issue. As far as the rest of Europe goes - no clue... but I'm sure others on here can comment if it's an actual problem, or another figment of your wild imagination.
The Swedish Govt has grimly resisted until the last possible moment various attempts by Brussels to ensure free competition on a number of things.
Even in the odd instance where it has slightly released its vice-like grip it has also ensured that it gets its pound of flesh by whatever means possible.
Whilst I am all for free trade and fair competition,looking at the instances of privatisations in the UK,Joe Public has received little or no benefit from the process in the longer term.
In many cases people are simply being ripped off big-time, allowing an increasing number of very fat cats to get even fatter.
I have no reason to believe it will be any different here with both the Govt and the Big Corporations standing at the front of the queue whilst Joe Public patiently sits at the back and waits for a better deal which is unlikely to ever arrive.
Competition is a vague term bandied about by economists and politicians to justify policy decisions based on economic theory.
Back in the real world one does not have to look far to see that competition is a rare comodity, for example supermarkets - one chain really stands out but where is the competition??? Size, it seems, IS everything!
So I applaud the attempt to privatise the pharmacy market but I predict that most of the business will be sucked up by THE super large supermarket chain rendering any smaller pharmacy businesses unprofitable.
A better policy would have been to keep drugs out of the supermarket (except under exeptional circumstances like where no other outlet available in the town) and let smaller operators (owner operators = small business) run the pharmacies.
In Sweden the trained pharmasists are almost exclusively women who mostly likely chose that career stream as it offered a safe and secure government job.
http://www.chemistdirect.co.uk/
A big part of pharmacy as a career in Sweden is that you get to work for a government organisation. In Australia, England and Ireland (where I have lived) a career in pharmacy is also a good opportunity for eventually starting up your own business.
Can you come up with a better explaination of why in the countries I mentioned the man/woman split is something like 70-30 or 60-40 but in Sweden it seems to be closer to 5-95.
So now its just Cuba and North Korea left with pharmaceutical monopolies??
Will the alcohol monopoly be next???
But I'm not too worried. The German pharmacies are entering the market now and Germans also have strong restrictions on strong drugs and aren't drugged-up like the Brits and Americans.
http://www.emedoutlet.com