Many of you have experienced the sticker shock filling a
prescription, especially if you don't have prescription
insurance. Unlike the cost of most goods and services
in a free market economy, which are kept in check by competition
and other free market forces, the cost of medications has been
skyrocketing because of the lack of these controls. So where
most goods will cost twice the wholesale cost and four times
the cost of production, medications often cost 64,000 percent
more than the cost of production!
Meanwhile, the cost of the exact same pill can vary by over
1000 percent from one drugstore to another. In addition, the
cost to somebody without health insurance is often five to ten
times as high as what the insurance company needs to pay, as
they have been able to negotiate down the drug prices.
So if you don't have insurance, and even if you do, you may
walk out of the drugstore feeling, well, financially wiped. Unless
you know these tricks!
- Compare prices at different pharmacies before you buy. For example the medication Ambien, which is often needed to help sleep in people with CFS and fibromyalgia, costs about $4 for each 10 mg tablet. So if you need 90 tablets and your insurance company won't pay for it, it will cost you about $360. So say you decide to get the generic instead. For the exact same tablet, the price will vary from nine cents per pill at Costco, to over $3 a pill at many other pharmacies. This is the case for many medications. So with a simple phone call, you can end up paying $8 for the three months of Ambien instead of $270.
In general, you'll find the best prices at Costco, with Walmart having a number of common medications that they price very low, while they charge very high amounts for others. So call and ask. Another helpful tip? You don't have to be a Costco member to use the pharmacy. When they ask for your Costco card at the entrance, simply tell them you're going to the pharmacy, and they will waive you right in.
- A wonderful tool? Get a free app called GoodRx or go to www.goodRx.com. Type in the medication name, strength, and quantity, and they will give you the negotiated price they have obtained for the pharmacies near you. Very often, I have found this to be over 90 percent less than what you would pay otherwise. And it will save you a bunch of phone calls. This app/website is outstanding.
- An important thing to know? For most medications, including compounded medications, you pay by the pill, not by the pill strength. So as an example, for the medication Viagra, it will cost over $50 a pill for a 100 mg tablet. It will cost almost exactly the same amount for a 25 mg or 50 mg tablet. So if you're getting 50 mg tablets, you can save 50 percent by simply getting 100 mg tablets and cutting them in half. This is the case for almost all medications. So a simple $7 pill cutter can save you thousands of dollars.
- In the vast majority of cases, the generic medication is exactly the same as the expensive brand-name. When I get medications, I will get the generic. Some people will find though, that the brand name will work better. A simple approach? Simply get the first month worth of the medication as the brand name, and then get the generic for refills. This way, in the rare event that they are not working the same for you, you will know.
- Medication patents are supposed to expire after 20 years, at which time the medication can go generic. But some medications are so profitable that the drug companies will either pay the generic companies not to make a generic, or will file expensive legal action against companies that try to make a generic. For example, the medication Viagra is over 20 years old, but still not available in generic. But here is the secret. Although not available in generic for erectile dysfunction, it is available as a 20 mg generic for pulmonary hypertension. So ask your doctor to write for Sildenafil 20 mg instead of Viagra. These will cost 60 cents a pill using the GoodRx App or website. So even if you need five of them to get the 100 mg dose, this will cost you $3 instead of $50!
- For many medications, market manipulations going on in the pharmaceutical industry has resulted in even the generics costing way more than they should relative to the cost of producing the pill. For some medications, here is another trick. See if your compounding pharmacy is able to make that medication and what it would cost them to make it.
So where fluconazole (Diflucan) 200 mg used to cost about $30 for 50 tablets, it now costs over $300 at most pharmacies, even for the generic. Using the GoodRx app will bring it down to $103. But if a compounding pharmacy makes it, you can often get it for under $30. The hack? The doctor has to order some difference in how it's made that sets it apart from what you can find in the drugstore for them to legally be able to make it. So your doctor can order a 210 mg tablet, or have a capsule made with low allergen components.
For example, when you heard all over the news about the one pharmaceutical company trying to gouge the public by charging obscene prices for an old antiparasitic, what you didn't hear about was that compounding pharmacies were making the same pill for less than a dollar each. Where 50 mg a day of testosterone cream can cost over $500 a month, compounding pharmacies can make it for $15–$30 a month. Simple!
- Often the best option is to work with a holistic practitioner to find natural alternatives, which are commonly more effective, generally much lower cost, and almost always much safer.
- As you feel better, remember to ask the doctor if you can lower the dose or stop the medication. Doctors are often too busy to think about this unless you remind them.
With these life hacks, you can slash your medication costs!