Viagra to hit drug stores soon, Rush expected as Canada finally gives approval March 10, 1999 By Leslie Papp Toronto Star Medical Reporter
Pharmacists are bracing for a rush of orders from men eager to obtain newly approved Viagra.
''Already people are asking for it - even doctors. It's going to be a big hit,'' Emad Khalil, pharmacist at St. George Pharmacy on College St., said yesterday.
''We tell them it's coming.''
Viagra has received federal approval and should be in pharmacies in about three weeks.
Each diamond-shaped Viagra tablet is to cost $12 to $13, not counting pharmacy dispensing fees. They will be in packages of four or eight tablets.
Demand for the medication is expected to send employee drug claims soaring.
Available in the United States since last spring, the blockbuster anti-impotence pill gave rise to a steady flow of Canadians heading south, prescriptions in hand, for Viagra.
''Now my patients won't have to shuffle off to Buffalo or 'Viagra' Falls,'' Dr. Jack Barkin, chief of urology at Humber River Regional Hospital, said yesterday.
It's estimated that between 2.5 million and 3 million Canadians have problems achieving and maintaining an erection. And Viagra should be able to help most of them.
''This will have a tremendous impact on our patients' lives,'' Barkin told a Toronto news conference sponsored by the drug's maker, Pfizer Canada Inc.
While Viagra has launched a thousand punch-lines and late night comedy routines, impotence is a serious health problem that threatens quality of life and relationships, Barkin said.
''It can lower self-esteem and increase depression, anxiety and anger.''
Allard Gee suffered from sexual dysfunction for two years. ''I was depressed,'' said the 58-year-old. ''I didn't really believe Viagra would do anything for me - I was amazed when it did.''
Gee obtained the drug free-of-charge through a Viagra study run by doctors in Kingston. His sex life was transformed, Gee said, adding that he and his wife now go through about eight pills a month.
''It gives you a much brighter outlook on life. You sort of feel that life's worth living again,'' he said.
U.S. doctors have, so far, written prescriptions providing 60 million Viagra tablets to 3 million men, said Theresa Firestone, Pfizer's vice-president of government and public affairs.
''The numbers are quite impressive,'' she said.
Counterfeit Viagra pills have emerged in other countries
While refusing to speculate on Canadian sales figures for Viagra, Firestone noted that the volume of drugs sold in this country is, in general, about 10 per cent of that south of the border.
Counterfeit Viagra pills have emerged in some parts of the world, Firestone said, adding that, so far, ''There aren't any in Canada, that we're aware of.''
To deter counterfeiters, the company's little blue pills are being sold in blister packs of four or eight tablets, rather than bottles, with each pack in a box bearing a special hologram.
Doctors caution that the newly approved drug isn't for everyone. Men taking nitroglycerin-based heart medications, in any form, must not use Viagra.
Nitroglycerin reduces blood pressure by relaxing and widening arteries. But its effect is compounded when mixed with Viagra, putting patients at risk of dangerously low blood pressure.
The drug poses little risk for heart patients who are not on nitroglycerin, but they should be aware that having sex is an exertion that can increase their risk of an attack, said urologist Dr. Richard Casey, director of The Male Health Centres, a chain of four clinics in Ontario.
''Sex is exercise,'' he warned.
More than 170 deaths worldwide have been indirectly liked to Viagra, involving men who died shortly after receiving a prescription. But ''there's no evidence that (the pill) adds to the cardiovascular risk inherent in sexual activity,'' said Dr. Eldon Smith, a University of Calgary cardiologist.
Studies of Viagra involving more than 4,500 men, including almost 500 Canadians, have shown that the drug is safe and has a 70 per cent success rate. Side-effects are fairly mild, the most common being headaches, facial flushing or an upset stomach.
Viagra is only recommended for men who have serious erectile dysfunction and it seems to be of limited use in enhancing the sexual performance of normal men, Casey said.
''We're not concerned that it's going to create sex maniacs.''
Viagra isn't an aphrodisiac, Barkin said. It won't work without sexual stimulation and can't increase a man's sexual desire or libido. ''You can't just pop the pill and watch Oprah and expect something to happen,'' Barkin said.
''Unless,'' he added, ''Oprah is exciting for you.'' thestar.ca |