Prescription medication affordability is a pressing issue globally, with many facing challenges accessing necessary treatments due to high costs. Recent trends show a surge in petitions advocating for healthcare reform to address skyrocketing prescription drug prices and ensure universal access to affordable medications. Key themes in these petitions include demanding government intervention to regulate drug prices, promoting generic alternatives to reduce costs, and challenging pharmaceutical companies pricing practices.
Notable petitions highlight stories of individuals struggling to afford life-saving medications, underscoring the urgency of systemic change. One petition with thousands of signatures calls for transparency in pharmaceutical pricing to hold companies accountable for unjustifiably high costs. Another petition urges policymakers to prioritize healthcare affordability and make prescription drugs more accessible to all.
Join the movement by exploring and supporting the petitions on prescription affordability. Your participation can drive meaningful change and ensure equitable access to vital medications for everyone.
3 supporters are talking about petitions related to Prescription!
I have Celiac and it has been so hard to get allergen information on medications. Most physicians tell you to ask the pharmacy, the pharmacy tells you to call the manufacturer, and the manufacturer just gives you a CYA statement that doesn't tell you anything. It is scary to take medicine not knowing if it will help or instead actually make you feel worse than before because it contains a hidden allergen. We require allergens to be listed on most foods, so shouldn't we require it for medications too? I hope this bill passes so people with allergens can determine what medications are safe for us.
Weight management is a crucial component to an individuals overall physical health, which is why it’ is extremely important to have the ability to purchase compound medications through tele-health providers! Insurance companies do not deem it important to cover semaglutide medications for obesity, leaving us turning to tele-health providers for compound medications. If you want to take tele-health providers away, then insurance needs to cover these medications that us struggling Americans can not pay out of pocket for that cost thousands of dollars to fill!
I have telemed calls with my physician of 8 years, and I get refills on my narcotic prescription, why should telemed Doctors be held to a different standard?