As Insurance Co-Pays Increase, People Do Without Their Medications

 

 

Many articles have been written about how the economy has affected people who have no health insurance and have to pay cash  for their medications and medical supplies. The high cost of prescription medications have caused many of these people to cut their pills in half or take their pills every other day instead of daily. Some are even splitting their blood glucose testing strips in half to get 2 tests from one!  Studies have shown that by not taking or by skimping on medicines, symptoms and outcomes worsened and the rates of heart attacks and strokes have increased.

Now, research is showing that even people who HAVE insurance are being affected. New studies has shown that as co-pay amounts doubled, the percentage of patients who had started their medications dropped. As an example, it was found that "five years after their diagnosis, about 82 percent of people with hypertension had begun taking the drugs they needed to get their blood pressure under control, versus only about 66 percent of those whose co-pays were twice as much"

If you are experiencing difficulty paying for your medications, shop around  for the best price. If you have insurance but pay high co-pays, search for a pharmacy that may be able to help you save money on your co-pays. Check out the website  www.FocusPharmacy.com and see if Focus can help reduce your co-pay payment.

New Chewing Gum to Treat Diabetes

So you don't like taking those big Metformin tablets because they're hard to swallow, taste awful, and what's more, they really do major damage to your stomach. Well, there may be an alternative sometime in the near future. Now in the testing phase, a chewing-gum product, called MetControl, will be given to 36 volunteer patients to test its speed and efficacy compared with that of immediate-release metformin pills according to the manufacturer, Generex Biotechnology Corporation of Toronto, Canada. Generex believes that metformin in good-tasting chewing gum would make it more acceptable to  patients and thereby increase adherence with diabetes therapy. 




Pharmacists and No Co-Pays Improves Diabetes A1C

In a project described in the March/April Journal of the American Pharmacists Association, employers in 10 U.S. cities agreed to waive copays for employees’ diabetes meds, and to fund regular meetings between pharmacists and diabetic employees. A year after the project launched, 914 patients who had been enrolled for at least three months ....MORE