
U.S. Sen. Ruben Gallego, D-Arizona, announced his support this week for a bill aimed at lowering prescription drug costs.
The Capping Prescription Costs Act attempts to put a cap on out-of-pocket prescription drug costs at $2,000 for individuals and $4,000 for families with health insurance.
If this bill became a law, the Affordable Care Act, Public Health Service Act, Employee Retirement Income Security Act and Internal Revenue Code would need to comply with these caps.
Insurers and group health plans would not be permitted to implement prescription drug cost-sharing above these caps, according to the bill.
Inflation adjustments would start annually in 2027.
Regarding this bill, Gallego said nobody “should have to choose between putting food on the table and filling a prescription.”
“Too many Arizonans” have to “skip doses, cut pills in half or make impossible financial decisions that risk their health because medication is just too expensive,” the senator said.
“I’m proud to support this bill to put a cap on out-of-pocket costs and make lifesaving medicine more affordable for every family,” he explained.
U.S. Rep. Steven Horsford, D-Nevada, said no American should need to “negotiate against themselves when choosing between the medications they need to be healthy and food they need to survive.”
Horsford introduced the House companion of this bill, while Sen. Raphael Warnock, D-Georgia, introduced the Senate’s version.
The Nevada representative said this legislation would “help Americans with private insurance save on needed prescriptions each year.”
According to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll last year, 60% of adults take at least one prescription medication. Another 25% take four or more. The poll also found almost 30% of Americans are not taking prescriptions as recommended due to the cost.
In May, President Donald Trump signed an executive order seeking to lower prescription drug costs for Americans. This EO tries to get drug prices for Americans down to the levels other countries pay.
According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, as of 2022, Americans pay almost three times as much as other countries for brand and generic prescription drugs. Last month, the White House issued a fact sheet that said almost 75% of “global pharmaceutical profits come from American taxpayers.”
Proposals to lower drug prices would benefit low-income and elderly populations, according to a 2025 study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
“aim to” is fine, but where is the follow up? Why don’t people demand accountability from their “representatives”. If you “aim to” reduce prices but in all actuality reduce supply, reduce competition, increase wait times, & increase cost, when are those policies removed – or, heck, even objectively assessed and corrected? Never.
“The most harm of all is done when power is in the hands of people who are absolutely persuaded of the purity of their intentions.” -Milton Friedman, economist
Pushing drugs is what the Gallego’s do.
Big Pharma will never allow this to pass. They make too much money in the US to allow this to pass
This could make some prescriptons no longer available.
Low income and elderly already get the benefits! No co-pay, usually no oop, why would this help? Hard working taxpayers already pick up the slack for 80% of the population!
But by all means get govt involved so the legal drug pushing machine keeps rolling along and the root of the problem is never addressed! Meanwhile Americans are sicker and more dependent on drugs than any other country in the world.
Screw Gallego
Gallego is as dumb as a box of rocks. price caps = scarcity
A use for AI that I would suggest is a program that monitors patient symptoms ; compares them with symptoms patient is reporting; and side effects of prescriptions now be used by that patient. They are treating the side effects of the CURE?
the conundrum; multiple prescriptions – multiple costs – changing of prescriptions ; the law assumes if the drug is prescribed ‘it was the correct prescription’ to fix the problem. NOT ALWAYS THE CASE! I would say – usually not the case, especially with specific diagnosis’s such as Diabetes for example; same for antibiotics – psychotropic treatments for mental illness – multiple meds for pulmonary disease.. its a pill soup! OF NOTE; go park yourself in the VA waiting room someday – it’s pill ID day – boxes of pills that the vet is using… could be 10+ different Rx’s – same true for out of the VA. No one is driving the boat – multiple prescriptions abound!