I have a Medicare Advantage HMO plan and I don't usually read the EOBs I get each month. Today I did. And I nearly had a stroke!
Do I have to be unde the care of a clinic? Why not just a doctors office
has changed for the better and cost of living has changed but $400 a month to $70,000......? I don't think so
One big flaw is that medicare is not allowed to do any negotiation regarding drug prices.
“The drug companies say they must impose higher prices in the U.S. to pay for research that enables them to innovate and develop new drugs that save our lives. But that’s not true. Half of the scientifically innovative drugs approved in the U.S. from 1998 to 2007 resulted from research at universities and biotech firms, not big drug companies, research shows. And despite their rhetoric, drug companies spend 19 times more on marketing than on research and development.” Healthcare for America Now http://www.ncpssm.org/EntitledtoKnow/entryid/2061/negotiating-for-lower-drug-costs-in-medicare-part-d
How much could Part D save? The Congressional Budget Office says that simply giving Medicare's low-income beneficiaries the same discount available under Medicaid would save $116 billion over 10 years — serious savings that could cut the cost of the program by roughly 10% a year. By some calculations, extending Medicaid-style savings to all 35 million of Medicare's Part D beneficiaries could save an additional $39 billion over 10 years.
In our independent investigation of how much profit drug companies really make, we obtained the actual price of active ingredients used in some of the most popular drugs sold in America.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership would provide large pharmaceutical firms new rights and powers to increase medicine prices and limit consumers' access to cheaper generic drugs. This would include extensions of monopoly drug patents that would allow drug companies to raise prices for more medicines and even allow monopoly rights over surgical procedures. For people in developing countries involved in the TPP, these rules could be deadly – denying consumers access to HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and cancer drugs.The TPP would also establish new rules that could undermine government efforts to contain rising medicine prices in developed countries like the United States. An analysis of the final TPP text shows taxpayer-funded public health programs would be exposed to pharmaceutical company attacks and constrain future policy reforms to reduce prescription drug costs for Americans. The text explicitly binds Medicare to TPP rules that would limit proposed policy changes to tamp down healthcare costs for seniors.
I just got my sheet for my prescriptions for the month. It's almost $2000 just for my Sensipar for a month. That's beyond ridiculous. I could live (meagerly) for almost 3 months on that. At least we all get Medicare and other programs to buffer the cost. I can't imagine how the Hep-C patients cope without.I know no health care system is truly perfect, but it seems like every step forward our country tries to take with it, we end up two steps back.