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Re: to help you find the best price for prescriptions
Hi Joan! Yes, Vetoryl is indeed a prescription drug. Sadly, though, I'm not sure whether any of these coupons will work, or be that helpful, with a brandname veterinary-use-only drug. With human drugs, by far the biggest saving is on generic equivalents. The benefit for us pet-owners is that there are many drugs that are prescribed both for humans and for animals, and these are the drugs for which these programs are most helpful. My Peg's phenobarb is an example, as would be various "human" blood pressure meds, antibiotics, etc. that our dogs also may take. So if your dog's Rx could be filled at a grocery store or "human" pharmacy, there's every chance that the coupon may help.
My approach at this point is that there is nothing to lose by trying. I keep a coupon in my purse all the time now, and if either my hudband, me, or one of the dogs has a drug prescribed, I ask the pharmacist to try running the coupon to see if it lowers the price.
P.S. I just checked pricing via the link in Saskia's first post in this thread, and the GoodRx program doesn't offer a coupon for Vetoryl, but it does provide one for Lysodren (the other Cushing's drug commonly used with dogs). So I'm assuming this is because Vetoryl is animal-only, whereas Lysodren is a human drug that is also prescribed for dogs.
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