New York Daily News

What insulin should cost

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Ahearty thank you to Eli Lilly, one of the planet’s top three producers of insulin, for slashing the price of its most widely prescribed form of insulin by 70% while capping related outof-pocket costs at $35 a month. That means diabetics with private insurance will now pay costs on par with the congressio­nally mandated rate for Medicare beneficiar­ies set at the start of the year.

More than 30 million Americans — that’s one in 11 of us — have diabetes; upwards of 7 million of us require daily insulin. And according to researcher­s at Yale, among those who need it every day, 14% are paying a whopping 40% or more of their post-subsistenc­e income, meaning what’s left after housing and food costs are taken care of, on the drug.

If that doesn’t get your blood pressure up, this should: Though credible independen­t analysts have estimated that a vial of insulin costs between $3 and $7 to manufactur­e, as of 2018, the average price per vial of insulin in the U.S. was $98.70, according to an analysis by the RAND Corp. In Japan? $14.40. In Canada? $12. In Germany, France and the U.K.? $11, $9 and $7.50, respective­ly. And no, Americans don’t get supersized vials.

Fixing this ought not be partisan. In 2020, President Donald Trump unveiled a plan to cap insulin costs for seniors, but, probably because the rightwing of his party would’ve howled “socialism,” it was a voluntary program with extremely limited reach. Upon assuming office in 2021, Joe Biden yanked the Trump rule and started anew, winning a $35-per-vial cap for seniors in the Inflation Reduction Act last year and now pushing in this year’s State of the Union speech for a universal insulin price limit.

At least at the moment, Congress looks unlikely to budge — which is why Lilly’s move is welcome. Other manufactur­ers have a choice: cling to their current price structure for as long as they can, or get with the program.

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