FDA

All of RxPop.com's participating pharmacies which are based in the United States meet or exceed standards enforced by the FDA (U.S. Food and Drug Administration). RxPop.com ensures all subscribers a safe and secure shopping experience eliminating all worries and hassels. Please review the details of the FDA (U.S. Food and Drug Administration) below.
The FDA states, "The drug distribution network for legal prescription drugs in the U.S. is a "closed" system that involves several players (e.g., manufacturers, wholesalers, pharmacies) who move drug products from the point of manufacture to the end user, and provides the American public with multiple levels of protection against receiving unsafe, ineffective, or poor quality medications. This system evolved as a result of legislative requirements that drugs be treated as potentially dangerous consumer goods that require professional oversight to protect the public health. The result has been a level of safety for drug products that is widely recognized as the world's "gold standard."
Furthermore, drugs that are outside the U.S. "closed" system, may not have been packaged and stored under appropriate conditions to prevent degradation, and there is no assurance that these products were manufactured under current good manufacturing practice (cGMP) standards. When consumers take such medications, they face risks of dangerous drug interactions and/or of suffering adverse events, some of which can be life threatening. More commonly, if the drugs are subpotent or ineffective, the patient may suffer complications from the illnesses that their prescriptions were intended to treat, without ever knowing the true cause.
Although some purchasers of drugs from foreign sources may receive genuine product that was made by the same manufacturer in the U.S., others may unknowingly buy counterfeit copies that contain only inert ingredients, legitimate drugs that are outdated and have been diverted to unscrupulous resellers, or dangerous sub-potent or super-potent products that were improperly manufactured. There is no way to tell the difference without doing a resource-intensive, time-consuming, laboratory analysis of each shipment that comes to the U.S."


































