My name is April. My breast cancer drug costs $13,000 a month. This is how I took a stand
My name is April. I live and work in Pensacola, Florida with my wonderful husband and our 11-year-old son. I also have incurable breast cancer.
My name is April. I live and work in Pensacola, Florida with my wonderful husband and our 11-year-old son. I also have incurable breast cancer.
Receiving assistance from a drug corporation to afford an expensive prescription feels a lot like pharma benevolence. Here's why these programs are robbing us blind:
There is a simple and potentially cost-saving question patients may not know they can ask their pharmacists.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — “Don’t Get Fooled Again.” That’s the message from cancer patient and founder and president of Patients For Affordable Drugs David Mitchell to 50 Democratic members of the House. The members all signed on to a letter supporting drug corporations’ lobbying efforts to rollback Big Pharma’s contribution to Medicare that saves patients and taxpayers money.
WASHINGTON, DC — Seniors are filling fewer prescriptions for brand-named drugs, but they’re spending significantly more because list prices keep going up, according to a new government report. In response, David Mitchell, a cancer patient and founder of Patients For Affordable Drugs, issued the following statement.
In an attempt to encourage and improve transparency, the FDA released a list of more than 50 drug makers accused by generic drug corporations of stalling providing samples that would increase competition and lower prices.
“We have an incredibly powerful, incredibly productive research and development program being run by N.I.H.,” Ameet Sarpatwari, an instructor at Harvard Medical School, said. “Taxpayers put in money that is paying big dividends, and yet we pay higher prices for prescription drugs than any other country. In effect, we have taxpayers paying twice.”
St. Louis — Patients For Affordable Drugs stood with Lora Moser, a cystic fibrosis patient unable to afford the medicines her family spent decades fundraising to develop, and launched a new campaign demanding that Vertex Pharmaceuticals lower the price of its life-extending drugs.
Moser and Patients For Affordable Drugs were represented Thursday at a meeting of the Institute For Clinical and Economic Review (ICER) by Juliana Keeping, mother to Eli, 5, who also has cystic fibrosis.
Patients For Affordable Drugs is the only independent national patient organization focused exclusively on achieving policy changes to lower the price of prescription drugs.