Trump Cuts Insulin Costs for Medicare Enrollees to $35 per Month

insulin
2C2K Photography/Flickr

President Donald Trump announced Tuesday a plan that would drastically lower the cost of insulin for Medicare enrollees to $35 a month.

White House counselor Kellyanne Conway said the deal was made with American insulin manufacturers and health care providers to limit a copay for a month’s supply of the drug to $35, or 66 percent of the current price, the New York Post reported.

The initiative would help the one-in-three Medicare enrollees who have diabetes, or approximately three million people.

The announcement comes as the cost of insulin is rising in the U.S. In one case, a diabetic groom-to-be died after taking a cheaper version of the drug to save money for his wedding.

“Having more predictable out of pocket costs will help seniors adhere to their doctor’s orders,” Conway told reporters on a briefing call.

The plan, which will go into effect January 2021, will save seniors 56 percent or $446 on average each year in insulin copays, according to Seema Verma, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

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