I suppose this could go under 'Business' as much as 'Health and Fitness' but let's start here...
For the second time in a couple years, my dermatologist has prescribed a drug that has a 'list' price of >$3000 for a 30 day supply. For today's specific drug, it looks like my cost through my insurance would normally be ~$600/mo.
In both cases, there was some sort of 'co-pay card' or 'direct savings card' from the drug manufacturer available that knocks my cost down to $30/mo or even free. I don't know whether the difference is applied to my deductible or not.
What's going on here? My skeptical self says this is a way to get people 'hooked' on an expensive treatment option and the price will get jacked up later. On the other hand, I suppose this is no different than the 'free samples' doctors give out...it's just a larger sample and directly from the manufacturer. The timeline for when the 'co-pay card' will no longer pay is not defined (as far as I can tell).
If I needed this to stay alive, I'm guessing I'd look at $600/mo differently but this is more of a 'quality of life' improvement treatment that I likely will not be willing to pay more than ~$100/mo for. I can't imagine there are enough folks willing/able to shell out $600/mo for this treatment for the drug companies to make a profit but maybe I'm wrong.
Anyone have any insight into how long these 'direct savings' programs typically run and if the price drops once the program is over?
My doctor had absolutely no interest in discussing the costs of treatment with me (which is one of multiple reasons I'll be looking for a new doc).
For the second time in a couple years, my dermatologist has prescribed a drug that has a 'list' price of >$3000 for a 30 day supply. For today's specific drug, it looks like my cost through my insurance would normally be ~$600/mo.
In both cases, there was some sort of 'co-pay card' or 'direct savings card' from the drug manufacturer available that knocks my cost down to $30/mo or even free. I don't know whether the difference is applied to my deductible or not.
What's going on here? My skeptical self says this is a way to get people 'hooked' on an expensive treatment option and the price will get jacked up later. On the other hand, I suppose this is no different than the 'free samples' doctors give out...it's just a larger sample and directly from the manufacturer. The timeline for when the 'co-pay card' will no longer pay is not defined (as far as I can tell).
If I needed this to stay alive, I'm guessing I'd look at $600/mo differently but this is more of a 'quality of life' improvement treatment that I likely will not be willing to pay more than ~$100/mo for. I can't imagine there are enough folks willing/able to shell out $600/mo for this treatment for the drug companies to make a profit but maybe I'm wrong.
Anyone have any insight into how long these 'direct savings' programs typically run and if the price drops once the program is over?
My doctor had absolutely no interest in discussing the costs of treatment with me (which is one of multiple reasons I'll be looking for a new doc).