The price for it is high, and the government shutdown isn’t making it easy on federal workers like Mallory Lorge, who must now ration the last two vials of insulin she has left.
Medication is a choice for many Americans: maybe you take the aspirin, maybe you don’t. But for over one million Americans, insulin is a necessity: not a choice.
A Government Worker’s Sacrifice
It’s day 25 into the shutdown, and Lorge, who currently works at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is one of the many federal workers making the sacrifice of serving their country with no pay.Independent With Type 1 Diabetes
In 2016, Alec Rashawn Smith, a determined and energetic 25-year-old, moved out from his parents’ house, ready to live independently. However, at age 26, no longer covered by his family’s insurance, he could not afford his insulin.Before 2017, he managed to pay his bills and everything was normal. But his mother, Nicole Smith-Holdt, said it was his first month without insurance that disrupted the steady flow, in an interview with The Epoch Times.
When Alec went to pick up his medication, he was given a price tag of $1,300. He couldn’t afford the medication, but he didn’t say a word about the problem to his mother. Like Lorge, he tried to manage with what he had left.
The Uninsured and the List Price
Former Minnesota Attorney General Lori Swanson, filed a lawsuit against three major insulin manufacturers in the United States, including Eli Lilly and Co., Sanofi-Aventis U.S. LLC, and Novo Nordisk, Inc.She claimed that these companies have “deceptively raised the list prices of insulin, making it less affordable to patients in high deductible health plans, the uninsured, and senior citizens on Medicare.”
In the meantime, Smith-Holdt advocates for affordable insulin, in dedication to her son and patients like Lorge. She also works for T1International: a non-profit with a mission of supporting communities, giving them access to insulin and diabetic supplies.