Colorado becomes first state in nation to cap price of insulin

Authored by vaildaily.com and submitted by fishin_missin69

Under a bill signed by Colorado's governor this week, diabetics will pay no more than $100 a month for insulin.

Diabetics in Colorado who use insulin to control their blood sugar levels won’t pay more than $100 per month for the drug starting in January thanks to a bill signed into law by Gov. Jared Polis on Wednesday.

“Today, we will declare that the days of insulin price gouging are over in Colorado,” Polis said in his office as he signed the bill, according to CBS Denver.

Insulin has been around for nearly a century, but the price that patients with Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes pay for the drug has doubled since 2012, according to the Healthcare Cost Institute. The cost of insulin can creep up toward $1,000 for those whose health care coverage requires significant cost-sharing.

The sudden spike in insulin prices lead to congressional inquiries and public outrage, but Colorado is the first state to implement a cap on what its residents can be charged for the medication. The law doesn’t limit what insulin manufacturers can charge insurance companies, and it’s expected those insurers will pay the difference.

Rep. Dylan Roberts, D-Avon, told The Denver Post earlier this year that the projections he saw showed the price of health care plans increasing by “a couple of cents, per person, per month.”

Read more via The Denver Post.

dalkon on May 23rd, 2019 at 21:32 UTC »

Insulin pricing is a particularly striking example of the huge problem with pharmaceutical monopoly pricing. And it's not just the brandname pharmaceutical companies. The generic manufacturers are also engaging in monopolistic collusion to raise prices well above the prices a competitive market would produce.

We have anti-trust laws to stop companies from manipulating prices like the big drug companies have been doing.

Daafda on May 23rd, 2019 at 20:05 UTC »

They have not capped the price. They have only capped what amount insurance companies can extract as co-pay.

sarcastic_commentor on May 23rd, 2019 at 19:14 UTC »

how many people are they trying to get to move there?

between legal weed, shrooms, and now this, the state is about to be flooded w/ transplants.....including me