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Trump Is Wrong in Claiming Full Credit for Lowering Insulin Prices
杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News & PolitiFact HealthCheck

Trump Is Wrong in Claiming Full Credit for Lowering Insulin Prices

鈥淟ow INSULIN PRICING was gotten for millions of Americans by me, and the Trump Administration, not by Crooked Joe Biden. He had NOTHING to do with it.鈥

Former President Donald Trump in a , June 8

Former President Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that he 鈥 and not President Joe Biden 鈥 deserves credit for lowering older Americans鈥 prescription drug prices, specifically for insulin.

In a on Truth Social, the former president鈥檚 social platform, Trump wrote: 鈥淟ow INSULIN PRICING was gotten for millions of Americans by me, and the Trump Administration, not by Crooked Joe Biden. He had NOTHING to do with it.鈥

Trump again claimed sole credit for lowering insulin prices during the June 27 presidential debate in Atlanta. After Biden touted the $35 monthly out-of-pocket cap for Medicare patients mandated by the Inflation Reduction Act, : 鈥淚鈥檓 the one that got the insulin down for the seniors. I took care of the seniors.鈥

It鈥檚 not just the former president making such claims. Fox News anchor and former Arkansas Gov. , a Republican, both have said the Biden administration is wrong to take credit for lowering insulin costs.

Because drug prices and Medicare will likely be issues in the presidential campaign, we dug into the facts surrounding those claims.

The Trump Administration鈥檚 Program

Trump is correct that his administration enacted a program to lower insulin costs for some patients on Medicare.

In July 2020, Trump signed an establishing the 鈥,鈥 a temporary, voluntary program run by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services that let some Medicare Part D prescription drug plans cap monthly out-of-pocket insulin copay costs at $35 or less. It covered at least one insulin product of each dosage and type.

The program began Jan. 1, 2021, and ran through Dec. 31, 2023. In 2022, the Trump-era program included a total of 2,159 Medicare drug plans, and that more than 800,000 Medicare beneficiaries who use insulin could have benefited from it that year.

The Department of Health and Human Services that more than 1.5 million Medicare beneficiaries paid more than $35 a month for insulin in 2020, before Trump鈥檚 program took effect. An , a nonpartisan think tank, showed the program reduced participants鈥 out-of-pocket insulin costs by $198 to $441 per year on average, depending on their Medicare plan.

The Inflation Reduction Act Provisions

The Inflation Reduction Act, which Congress passed and Biden signed into law in August 2022, included an insulin provision that went further than Trump鈥檚 voluntary initiative.

The act did cap out-of-pocket costs of insulin for Medicare patients at $35 per month. But whereas the Trump program applied only to certain Medicare Part D plans, the act mandated that all Medicare drug programs cap out-of-pocket insulin costs 鈥 including those in what鈥檚 known as Medicare Part B, which pays for medical equipment such as insulin pumps. The act鈥檚 insulin provisions took effect Jan. 1, 2023, for Part D plans and July 1 of that year for Part B.

The act also mandated that the out-of-pocket price cap apply to all insulin products a given Medicare plan covers, not just a subset.

Taken together, those provisions mean a far greater number of Medicare beneficiaries stand to benefit from the act鈥檚 insulin provisions 鈥 including people receiving insulin via a pump, who were left out of the Trump-era program.

CMS estimates that more than 3.3 million Medicare beneficiaries use one or more of the common forms of insulin. Although some of those people were likely already paying less than $35 per month for their medications, the Inflation Reduction Act benefited far more than the 800,000 patients affected by Trump鈥檚 program.

鈥淚t’s likely a larger population than under the Trump administration’s model,鈥 said Juliette Cubanski, deputy director of the Program on Medicare Policy at KFF, a health information nonprofit that includes 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News.

鈥淭he Trump administration did establish this voluntary model, and one perhaps could view that as some precedent for what we saw in the Inflation Reduction Act,鈥 Cubanski added. 鈥淏ut I think it’s inaccurate to state that President Biden had nothing to do with enabling millions of Americans to benefit from lower insulin copayments.鈥

Preliminary research shows the Inflation Reduction Act鈥檚 insulin provisions had a greater average financial benefit than those in Trump鈥檚 program. Insulin-using older Americans were estimated to save an annual average of $501 per person, .

The Inflation Reduction Act has also had an impact beyond Medicare. After the law passed, some pharmaceutical companies 鈥 including , , , and 鈥 self-imposed price caps for all insured insulin users, not just Medicare patients. During his 2023 State of the Union address, Biden proposed to all insulin patients, and he鈥檚 made that point a staple of his campaign appearances.

鈥淚’m determined to make that apply to every American, not just seniors, in the second term,鈥 he said at a campaign event in May in Philadelphia.

The Stakes for the 2024 Election

Beyond insulin products, the Inflation Reduction Act caps total out-of-pocket prescription costs at $2,000 annually for people with Medicare drug plans starting in 2025, down from $3,300 this year for most Medicare beneficiaries.

But every congressional Republican opposed the Inflation Reduction Act, including its insulin savings provisions, in 2022, and the law is vulnerable to repeal should Trump take the White House. Trump has repeatedly criticized the law and called for overturning some of its provisions. He has not specified how he would address its health measures.

In an email exchange with 杨贵妃传媒視頻 Health News, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt highlighted drug savings programs the former president instituted during his term in office, but repeatedly declined to extrapolate on, or defend, Trump鈥檚 claim that Biden deserves no credit for lowering insulin costs.

Asked whether Trump intended to maintain the Inflation Reduction Act鈥檚 insulin provisions should he win a second term in office, Leavitt wrote, 鈥淧resident Trump will do everything possible to lower drug costs for Americans when he鈥檚 back in the White House, just like he accomplished in his first term.鈥

Our Ruling

Trump can claim some credit for lowering insulin costs for seniors, as his administration advanced a voluntary program to do so.

But his claim that Biden had 鈥淣OTHING to do with it鈥 is patently false. The Inflation Reduction Act, which Biden signed into law, imposed a mandatory Medicare insulin price cap that applied across the program, benefiting a significantly larger number of insulin users 鈥 including people not enrolled in Medicare. 

We rate Trump鈥檚 claim False.

Sources:

Civica Rx, 鈥,鈥 March 3, 2022

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 鈥,鈥 accessed July 2, 2024

CMS, 鈥,鈥 May 26, 2020

CNN, 鈥,鈥 June 28, 2024

Eli Lilly and Co., 鈥,鈥 March 1, 2023

Email exchange with Karoline Leavitt, Donald J. Trump 2024 campaign national press secretary, July 1, 2024

Facebook.com, , June 10, 2024

Federal Registrar, 鈥,鈥 July 24, 2020

Department on Health and Human Services, 鈥,鈥 Jan. 24, 2023

KFF, 鈥,鈥 April 20, 2023

Novo Nordisk, 鈥,鈥 March 14, 2023

Phone interview with Juliette Cubanski, deputy director of KFF鈥檚 Program on Medicare Policy, June 16, 2024

Rand Corp., 鈥,鈥 May 2023

Republican Study Committee, 鈥,鈥 March 20, 2024

Sanofi, 鈥.,鈥 June 1, 2023

Stat, 鈥,鈥 June 13, 2024

The White House, 鈥,鈥 March 2, 2023

The White House, 鈥,鈥 May 29, 2024

The White House, 鈥,鈥 Feb. 7, 2023

Truthsocial.com, , June 8, 2024

X.com, , June 3, 2024