I need this medication to live.
I’ve been forced to use expired insulin because there’s no way I can afford to pay $214 again.
I’ve been forced to use expired insulin because there’s no way I can afford to pay $214 again.
More than 13% of American adults -- or about 34 million people -- report knowing of at least one friend or family member in the past five years who died after not receiving needed medical treatment because they were unable to pay for it.
Two-year campaign opposing cost-saving plans featured secret payments, a widely criticized consultant's report, and celebrity drug cops.
My sister and I began to share insulin in order to cut costs. I began to eat less to make my insulin last longer.
Two cancer patients will stand up to Big Pharma before key House committees today and Thursday to urge Congress to take urgent action to lower prescription drug prices by allowing Medicare to negotiate.
I don’t know a single person who can afford it, and we shouldn’t have to.
I need that medication, and I certainly can’t afford $1,800 per month. I don’t know anyone who could.
David Mitchell, a cancer patient and the founder of Patients For Affordable Drugs, will testify today before a U.S. House of Representatives subcommittee at the hearing, “Profits Over Consumers: Exposing How Pharmaceutical Corporations Game the System.”
Patients For Affordable Drugs is the only independent national patient organization focused exclusively on achieving policy changes to lower the price of prescription drugs.