Kirk
Well-known member
I have long been a skeptic of the much talked about, prescription discount cards, as opposed to using insurance. We are on Medicare, have a Medigap policy, and also keep a Part D prescription plan using the list of frequent prescribed medicines to help to choose the best plan. My wife has been medicated for depression for many years with reasonably good success but her doctor recently wrote her a prescription of a new drug, after testing her with some samples that she had. The drug has worked very well so was prescribed. It is a new drug that has no generic equivalent so we were not surprised that it was expensive and had a high copay. We were not prepared for the listed price of nearly $1700 for a 90 day supply with our copay of $1005. I did some digging about it with our insurance and after some discussion, headed off to CVS to get it anyway. The young man to waited on me took one look at the bill and told me that if I could give him 5 or 10 minutes he was sure that he could save me at leat $900. After a short wait he called me back over and said that he did find some help, would $26.34 be OK for the med? When I expressed surprise he said that they have software that will do a search for the best price using discount cards. I took the meds, paid the $26.34 and left, but am still wondering how that could possibly be? I have been digging online and really find no explanation that makes any sense to me. Has anyone else used one of those cards and do you have any idea of how that can be explained? Here is what I have found so far.
How Do Prescription Cards Work?
How Do Prescription Cards Work?