More states doing what they can to cap insulin costs More states are doing what they can to cap insulin costs
In her early 20s,
Hunt was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes as a 4-year-old and has been on insulin since then to help control her blood sugar levels. But while in college and feeling guilty for saddling her parents with high copays for the insulin, she started lowering her prescribed dosage. "It was a little less here, a little less there," she recalled recently.
It proved a life-altering decision, one that resulted in two surgeries in each eye and, ultimately, the complete loss of vision in her left one.
Once she was out of college and on her own health insurance plan, Hunt couldn't afford the
It didn't control her diabetes nearly as well, and it left her sicker more often. She worried about long-term damage to her kidneys and the nerves in her limbs. Still, it cost her a doable
But 2019 brought a welcome change:
In response to the steep rise in out-of-pocket costs for insulin over the past two decades, nearly two dozen states have passed measures in the past few years capping the out-of-pocket costs for some patients.
Last year,
"These proposed solutions are definitely a step in the right direction and address a big harm, which is when people ration because of affordability," said Dr.
But the state caps leave out many residents. They cover patients enrolled in state-regulated health insurance plans, which generally are individual health insurance policies sold on Affordable Care Act marketplaces as well as state employee health plans.
However, the state laws can't include most large employer and union health plans; those fall under federal government regulation.
The financial burden of the caps falls on some combination of the players involved in the distribution of medicines - the manufacturers, the health plans and the pharmacy benefit managers, known as PBMs, which administer pharmacy benefits for health plans.
Those entities generally have opaque and somewhat contentious relationships that ultimately determine both drug prices and profit distribution among them. Critics have long complained that the lack of transparency makes it hard to tell whether patients pay reasonable amounts for their medicines.
Seven of the states with caps set a limit of
According to the diabetes association, 6 million
Since the early 2000s, as manufacturers raised the price of insulin, the cost to patients rose.
One 2022 analysis by the
Inevitably, the costs to patients caused many to ration their insulin.
In a 2020 survey conducted by the
"I remember at the time this being such a burden," he recalled. "Even at the time, it was immensely challenging for families, especially if you had no insurance."
Having taken office in 2017, Roberts became increasingly eager to pass a measure to help ensure diabetes patients can afford insulin.
"It doesn't make any capitalistic or market sense that it costs so much," he said. "And you have to take it, or you will die, so you are really being held hostage."
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