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The inflation reduction act is probably the most significant piece of climate change policy in American history and is expected to bring emissions to a little under half 2005 levels.
Also, I think it capped insulin prices at $35 a month? That was the hope anyway.
I'll be paying 380 ish bucks for insulin this coming month, only using my "good, professional job" type insurance to cover some of the cost. It's around 200/mo. Cheaper to buy from Walmart directly without insurance than it is to process it through it at my required pharmacy. I don't know if the insulin caps have taken effect, or if I don't qualify, all I know is I'm getting screwed because I'm alive and want to stay that way.
The rest of the policy seems cool, but won't be if it pans out like the insulin crap.
Here in Sweden insulin is free. Although we have universal healthcare most medical things cost a little, up to about $230/year then any medication or procedure is free.
Insulin, and related equipment and so on, doesn't even cost a little for the patient here and is completely free. It does of course cost our government and taxpayers money, our government pays about $0.09 per person per day for insulin.