A satirical X post saying the three major insulin manufacturers in the United States had announced 2,000%-3,000% price increases after President Donald Trump rescinded a 2022 executive order on prescription drug prices has been shared online as authentic.
A provision about insulin in the Inflation Reduction Act is conflated with a 2022 executive order by former President Joe Biden on lowering prescription drug costs in posts online that suggest President Donald Trump has canceled the $35 insulin co-pay cap for certain Medicare programs.
Researchers explore the impact of exercise on the short-term regulation of insulin pathways in brain circuits.
“Rescinding the cap on insulin at $35 only makes pharmaceutical richer and everyday Americans, including MAGA voters, seriously poorer,” Steven Bechloss—author of the Substack, America, America — posted to the Bluesky social media platform.
President Donald Trump voided an executive order signed by former-President Joe Biden aimed at lowering prescription drug prices.
Prices for insulin, the essential drug for treating diabetes, have plummetted to their lowest levels in a decade following a rise in generic options. In
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison on Monday will share a major development in his lawsuit against three of the biggest insulin manufacturers. Ellison first accused the companies of deceptive pricing back in 2018. Now, Minnesotans are paying less for insulin — depending on where they’re buying it from.
ST. PAUL, Minn. – All Minnesotans, whether they have insurance or not, will be able to buy insulin products for $35 a month for the next five years.
Fourteen members of an Australian religious group have been convicted of killing an eight-year-old diabetic girl who was denied insulin for almost a week. Elizabeth Struhs died at home in 2022, having suffered from diabetic ketoacidosis, which causes fatally high blood sugar.
Height has been linked to an increased risk of certain cancers, including pancreatic, uterine, and breast cancer, due to factors like genetics and excessive nutrition. Taller individuals benefit metabolically but may face heightened cancer risks.
The parents of Elizabeth Rose Struhs, who died in 2022, were part of a small religious sect in Australia that believed that medical care went against their faith.