2h
·
Insulin
is a decades-old, lifesaving medicine. But prices have increased so much that many Americans
with diabetes cannot afford it.
·
The
outcry has heated up lately, including with multiple inquiries from lawmakers
and hearings.
·
Healthcare
companies have responded with new programs to ease costs for certain
patients and certain products. But critics say drug companies should just lower
prices.
Insulin is a
decades-old, life-sustaining medicine.
And yet prices
are so high that Americans with diabetes have
been forced to take desperate measures, including rationing the drug.
This has been a
problem for years. But the outcry has heated up lately, with lawmakers
repeatedly — and increasingly forcefully— asking drug companies and other
healthcare players at congressional hearings why insulin is so expensive.
"I don't know
how you people sleep at night," Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois told
healthcare executives at a Wednesday congressional hearing about insulin
prices. "Your days are numbered."
Companies have been
forced to respond. They have announced avariety of new programs aimed at limiting
how much patients pay out of their own wallets.
These measures have
attracted criticism as being "PR stunts," though, because they apply
only in specific circumstances, or for specific products. Six million Americans
rely on insulin each day, according to the American Diabetes Association.
There will be a lot of PR acrobatics about generic
insulin. I’m not going to stop investigating how @LillyPad and other insulin makers keep
raising prices on a decades old drug.
—Tracey at #DrupalCon
(@BergFulton) April 10, 2019
New
insulin programs announced lately include:
·
The drugmaker Sanofi will,
starting in June, make up to 10 boxes of its insulin pens or vials available each month for $99. This program was
first put in place a year ago, but then it got patients just one vial of
insulin or box of pens for $99-$149. The expanded program is intended for
anyone paying high prices out-of-pocket, and there is no income eligibility
requirement, Sanofi said.
·
The health company Express
Scripts is capping how much people with diabetes pay for
insulin at just $25 a month. The patient's employer
has to both contract with Express Scripts and opt in to the program.
·
Drug company Eli Lilly is
making a generic version of its insulin and one of
the most commonly-used types, Humalog, available for $137.35 a vial or $265.20
for a box of five pens — half the price of the brand name.
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