Latest News | Apr 20, 2022

73 Organizations Join Push For Lower Rx Prices

The following organizations are part of the Push For Lower Rx Prices campaign:

AARP
Advancing AZ
Alliance for Retired Americans
American Academy of Neurology
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME)
American Federation of Teachers
American Medical Student Association
Authentic Caribbean Foundation Inc.
Be a Hero
Blue Shield of California
Campaign for a Family Friendly Economy
Center for American Progress
Center for Medicare Advocacy
Citizen Action of Wisconsin
Colorado Consumer Health Initiative
Committee to Protect Health Care
Communications Workers of America
Community Catalyst
Consumer Action
Consumers for Affordable Health Care
Doctors for America
Employers’ Forum of Indiana
Families USA
FL #insulin4all, T1International
Generation Patient
Greater Philadelphia Business Coalition on Health
Health Access California
Health Action New Mexico
Health Care For All Massachusetts
Health Care Voices
Health Law Advocates
Human Rights Watch
Indivisible
Initiative for Medicines, Access & Knowledge (I-MAK), Inc
Interfaith Center for Corporate Responsibility (ICCR)
Jewish Alliance for Law and Social Action
Justice in Aging
Knowledge Ecology International
KS Business Group on Health
Lower Drug Prices Now
Main Street Alliance
Maryland Health Care For All! Coalition
Medicare Rights Center
Metro New York Health Care for All
MomsRising
National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare
National Multiple Sclerosis Society
New Jersey Citizen Action
New Mexico Consumers for Affordable Prescriptions Coalition
Nurses for America
Oregon Coalition for Affordable Prescriptions
Patients For Affordable Drugs Now
Pennsylvania Health Access Network
People’s Action
PrEP4All
Prescription Justice
Program On Regulation, Therapeutics, And Law (PORTAL), Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School
Progressive Democrats of America
Protect Our Care
Public Citizen
Purchaser Business Group on Health
R2H Action [Right to Health]
SEIU
Social Security Works
T1International
TakeAction Minnesota
Tennessee Health Care Campaign
U.S. PIRG
United States of Care
Universal Health Care Foundation of Connecticut
Universities Allied For Essential Medicines (UAEM)
Unrig Our Economy
West Health Institute

My name is Cynthia Tidrick and I live in Princeton, WV. I’m 60 years old, work as a contractor for a life science company, and live with emphysema.

Emphysema is a progressive lung disease that, even when treated, leads to shortness of breath and continued scarring. So that I can support myself, perform activities of daily living, and enjoy physical mobility, I need a long acting inhaler called Bevespi. This medication opens my airways and helps me breathe easier. However, Bevespi has become increasingly unaffordable.

Cynthia is sitting in a living room looking at the camera through black glasses. Her hair is white and worn short and she is wearing tree of life earrings.

I am a Technical Writer and for the last decade have worked as contracted labor. I continue to work contracts, usually six months at a time. Consequently, my health insurance is always precarious. Over the past few years, the cost for my inhaler has ranged by hundreds of dollars depending on my insurance plan. But over the last 18 months, which included two contracts and a period of unemployment, I have paid and continue to pay $449 for a 30 day supply. I am bewildered by the high price of my inhaler.

I have tried other long acting inhalers that were financially affordable, but the side effects were debilitating and required additional medications to treat.

Thus far, I am very lucky to be able to afford my inhaler despite this high cost. But all that has to happen is for my current contract to fail to renew, and I am in trouble. I budget around this cost and keep the price in mind every month. I am 60 and believe I would be better served by affordable medication and saving that $400 dollars a month for my pending retirement. The fewer services I need as a retired senior, the better for West Virginia and the United States tax payer.

Lower drug prices for long acting inhalers like Bevespi would bring peace of mind to me and countless other patients across the country. Having predictable costs over time makes budgeting easier, savings more robust, and we all know less stress makes for a happier public. 

Currently, Congress has the chance to pass meaningful drug reforms that would allow Medicare to negotiate lower drug prices, curb drug price increases that exceed inflation, and cap out-of-pocket costs for seniors. I need my Senator, Joe Manchin, to pass these reforms now. West Virginians like me can’t wait any longer for relief from high drug prices.

WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Biden, Rep. Abigail Spanberger, and Secretary Xavier Becerra today highlighted how the drug pricing reforms in the Build Back Better Act will help millions of Americans afford their medicines. On behalf of patients, David Mitchell, a cancer patient and founder of Patients For Affordable Drugs Now, issued the following statement: 

“President Biden, Secretary Becerra, and Rep. Spanberger know that high prescription drug prices affect every American family and are a serious burden for millions each day. Patients are making impossible decisions between filling prescriptions or buying groceries, cutting pills in half or paying rent. Just last month — in spite of healthy and, in some cases, record revenues — Big Pharma raised the prices of nearly 750 medications that patients depend on. Because of the unjustified and unchecked prices of brand-name drug companies, Americans have less money in their pockets to cover other essential everyday expenses. 

“Rep. Spanberger knows this issue is ‘top of mind’ for her constituents. President Biden understands how this issue affects American families. The drug pricing reforms in the Build Back Better Act will put a stop to price gouging, lower prices by allowing Medicare to negotiate directly with drug companies, and cap out-of-pocket costs for Medicare beneficiaries and millions of people who depend on insulin.

“President Biden, Democrats in the House, and all 50 Democrats in the Senate support these reforms. It’s past time to get it done.”

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