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I know that most insurance agents know this but you can't compare the copays on an insurance plan like silverscript to a discount card like goodrx. That would be completely ridiculous and absurd.
Rick
I included comparison to GoodRx and National which some said were ones to do so with..
Nifedipine ER 60 mg, zip 30328
GoodRx $19.26
National $24.80
Rx Card co pay would be $10.00; add in monthly $48 premium and next cost is $58 keeping in mind that is doing the math for only one prescription.
Decided to check Clobetasol creme 0.05%, a medication I use
GoodRx $87.84
National $204.01
Rx Card co pay would be $10.00; add in monthly $48 premium and next cost is $58 keeping in mind that is doing the math for only one prescription. Even if the only prescription in a month would but at ~$30 cheaper than GoodRx
Can anyone put the above post into English? I haven't a clue what "silverscript price for goodrx" means.
*ick
Wrong on 2 counts.
a) KennyWest's (agent) card is basically an insurance plan and he is comparing it to a discount card.
b)It is not "ridiculous and absurd" for a United States citizen over 65 and on Medicare to compare the cost of drugs under an insurance plan with the cost of drugs under a discount card.
Insurance agents understand that these are 2 separate products. One is actual insurance and the other is simply a discount. Neither one is best for all medications.
Rick
only for age 64 and underIHC.........................