
no matter how you look at it I'd never pay more then five a bar or 2 for 5 blue hell since I can get a dollar a pop I barely wanna pay 2 for 5 and I got anxiety bad I'm a recovering heroine addict now 1 year clean and taken a few xanax completely relaxes me mellows me out and rids my anxiety away very well so yeah I'm one of those people that need the medication but sometimes have to use illicit means to get a hold of them it's horrible our medical/insurance system is totally fucked specially when I can pay 45 for 90 prescribed with the insurance probably next to nothing but still I need them and paying 5 for a bar or 2 for 5 blues is even a bit much which is why I love when it's time for my refill go pay 45 for 90 or my connect for a dollar a pop blues. I also go to a doctor and get prescribed 90 1mg blues and have no insurance and only pay 45 $ so that's still cheaper then the streets. Lol 10 7 $ a pill is a frigid rip off for them I get em for 5 at most and I get 1mg blues for a dollar a piece and I live in Philly on east coast. Thanks for visiting and sharing about this in your country.
#Alprazolam 5 street value for free#
When an item, any item, (in this case, a prescription drug) is in high demand and the supply is low, the cost will continue to rise.Īs long as some idiot is willing to pay that kind of money for a drug on the street (that the original patient probably gets for free with his insurance), then people will continue to sell it for the inflated price. For drug sellers, it is a sellers market. Of course there are still physicians (and always will be) who don't mind skating close to the edge of overprescribing (according to the new standards) & some who operate as pill mills.īecause this and other narcotic medication is harder to come by legally, those who turn to the streets to purchase it, are in heavy competition.
#Alprazolam 5 street value cracked#
Because they have cracked down on doctors, fewer patients are receiving this medication and the ones who do get it, get less (quantity & milligrams) than ever before. I am told by many doctors whom I am friends with and with whom I have worked with, that the government and the medical boards have basically tied their hands and left them without much authority to choose how much medication a patient receives. Unfortunately, in La., as well as many other states in the U.S., the addicts and those who illegally distribute narcotics have caused the medical boards, the local authorities, the pharmacy boards and the DEA to scrutinize each and every physician who prescribes narcotics. I don't know, perhaps the physicians in your country are not monitored as closely or maybe your government actually allows doctors to perform their job and prescribe what the doctor concludes is an appropriate dose of medication for his/her patient based upon the doctors, education, and years of experience, after consulting with a patient. As you are probably aware prescription drug abuse and misuse has become and international epidemic. I wouldn't be surprised, at all, to learn the price had actually increased. I certainly don't purchase the medication, but from my years as both a prosecutor and a criminal defense attorney, I can attest that this was the going rate a year or so ago.
