1020rx.com Reviews
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495 Grand Boulevard
Suite 206, Miramar Beach, Florida 32550, United States
8 Reviews for 1020rx.com
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1020rx.com complies with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health. HON is a non-profit dedicated to improving healthcare information online. For more information, please see the HON certification for 1020rx.com.
I canceled via email, phone, and snail mail. Then I did it again and again. Three times I tried and STILL they charged my credit card. They did this for 6 months. I called to complain AGAIN and the woman answered said the company doesn't work with the call center anymore and they have no forwarding number. So I got a new credit card number and when my card was "Declined" I tried one last time. A woman answered and SAID she canceled it again. We will see, either way they can't charge my account. This was an awful experience, it was not worth the money I saved (which was only 10 dollars more than the plan).
Avoid this site! It will only cause headaches.
The phone number listed on my bank statement isnt the number to 1020rx...it refers me to a dating line, so I went to the original email I recieved from them and tried to reply AND tried to send an email to the address they sent me- and all were returned undeliverable. I called the number in the email and was told to send a letter in writing requesting cancelation of my membership and it was returned to me!!! So I went directly to the site again and sent them and email there- it won't take it! My bank says I have an agreement with them and I can't just stop payment- hopefully today they will change thier mind if I bring in all this proof that it really truly is a scam!
Quick and easy to use, was saving at my pharmacy within minutes of registering.
I printed my prescription card right after I signed up, took it to Walgreens pharmacy and saved $ 97 on my monthly meds. My brother signed up as well and is happy with the savings - highly recommend!
Signed up for Aetna dental plan @ 1020rx which only cost me $7.95 per month - then saved over $320 at my dentist the following week!
Avoid like the plague! Move along, there's no savings here. Only someone to take your money. No way to contact them. Answering service can not provide good contact info. No actual phone number and fake mailing addresses!
Fantastic savings on my medicine! Was able to print my card rig after signup - saved $ 197 in Walgreens pharmacy
Odd that this site has an HON certification, since it doesn't appear to offer health or healthcare information and simply sells a plan. No medically trained persons contribute to the site. Not that it's any indication of shadiness in general, but it's odd. And from what I can tell, as the site doesn't fit any of the HON requirements it also can't be penalized for breaking any of them.
The HON requirement for justification originally stated that the certified site needed to provide a certain standard of service, and to be able to back up any claims it made. A dissatisfied customer might interpret that to mean any failure to provide the service that was on offer. However, if you look at the current definition on the HON site complaints page, the Justifiability requirement has been narrowed to "Justifiability - References" and now only applies to medical information. Since the 1020rx site provides no medical information anyway, I doubt it can be asked to justify anything.
I think there's a good argument that the HON certification shouldn't apply to a site like this, especially if the stories of bad service are true.
Yeah, I agree. We should flag this site and have the sitejabber team report it to the HON authority. Seems like there is no real information on the site, just a sales site.
Well I don't know what we'd report, because the site has been certified by HON since 2007 and has therefore had one annual re-examination already; it's having another right now and HON state it will be re-certified afterward. HON has to be aware of the nature of the site, so it must consider that the site is appropriate for certification.
It's not a criticism of the site itself, which is doing nothing illegal or deceptive; it is perfectly entitled to apply for the HON certification, and then it's up to them to accept it or otherwise. I'm questioning whether HON should be certifying a sales site in the first place. I don't suppose for a moment that most people know what the HON badge on a page actually signifies, I certainly didn't. But it lends a site a powerful air of responsibility because the accompanying text uses the word "trustworthy" and offhand I don't see any way that HON could establish that for themselves.
In the case of healthcare information, it would be fairly easy to tell if the information provided was accurate or not, or whether it had been provided by medically-qualified authors. But a site selling a discount card? Personally I just don't think it's appropriate, regardless of whether the discount card or the site are great services or not.




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