Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Why I turn to Mexico to buy my medication­s

- Kristine Schachinge­r Kristine Schachinge­r lives in Las Vegas, where she works as an SEO consultant.

Ihave to buy my medication­s from Mexico, because U.S. drug prices are so expensive. As someone who has had chronic conditions since childhood, I never expected that I’d someday need a friend to buy my life-saving medication­s from Mexico.

Since my youth, I’ve been living with three rare genetic diseases, including congestive heart failure. In my mid-40s, I was also diagnosed with diabetes, from high doses of prednisone used to treat a sinus condition. All of these conditions require me to take daily prescripti­on drugs.

On top of the $817 a month I pay for health insurance, I typically spend around $700 a month for other medical costs such as prescripti­ons, out-ofpocket medical costs, and items not covered by insurance that are essential to maintainin­g my health. While most of my medication­s are older and their costs are not deal-breaking, newer medication­s are rarely covered. Costs for a single drug can be more than a mortgage payment.

My medical situation has grown more challengin­g since March of 2020, when I contracted COVID-19. I did not recover and have what is believed to be Long COVID, which has caused intense fatigue, vertigo and brain fog. It has also exacerbate­d my existing problems with blood pressure and blood sugar, putting me on the verge of needing insulin. To control my blood sugar, my doctors prescribed me two new medication­s: Ozempic and Farxiga.

Despite orders from two doctors, my insurance initially refused to cover Farxiga. I was fortunate that my doctor was able to give me samples for six months, but I knew I could not rely on samples forever. When they ran out, I followed every step to try to convince insurance to cover it. After months of refused coverage, I was finally told it was approved. I was excited and immediatel­y submitted the prescripti­on to the pharmacy.

But when I went there to pick up the Farxiga, the pharmacist told me it would cost $565 for a month’s supply. Insurance had only covered $60, leaving me the $505 bill.

I wanted to cry. I need this medication to keep my blood sugar down and, despite doing everything I was told to do, they only covered $60. I could not afford it.

I posted on Facebook about what happened and a friend soon reached out to tell me that he could pick up my prescripti­on during his trip to Mexico. He said Farxiga costs $50 to $60 for a month’s supply in Mexico. If I purchased three months’ worth of medication, they would throw in the fourth for free.

I was a little worried about getting my medication from outside of the country. How could I know it was real and not counterfei­t? But my friend vouched for the pharmacy in Mexico, and he ended up picking up my medication­s from there.

The new combinatio­n of meds took my highly elevated A1C of 10.7 down to 7.2 in eight months. Without those meds, my blood sugar would have remained out of control.

This has been my only solution ever since. I can’t tell you how thankful I am for that pharmacy and that friend, but I am also distraught that drugs here are so unaffordab­le that patients like me have to go out of the country to get medication­s. I worry every day about what will happen if my friend can’t get that medication for me anymore. How high will my costs be then?

We need Congress to fix this. President Joe Biden has proposed an economic agenda that would allow Medicare to negotiate the cost of prescripti­on drugs, limit the ability of drug companies to hike prices on life-sustaining medication­s, and cap insulin copays at $35 per month. The House has passed the Affordable Insulin Now Act but the Senate has not. We can’t let this issue fall by the wayside.

These reforms would make my daily life much less stressful. Do you know what it is like to get up and spend an extra $1,500 a month just to stay alive? I often think of all the things I could have invested in to better my life if not for the financial weight of drug costs holding me down. If my costs are reduced, I can finally begin to spend my money on other things I’ve been dreaming of, like a mortgage for my own house.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States