Feature

New documentary highlights human toll of high insulin cost


 

A new documentary premiering at the 2023 South by Southwest (SXSW) Festival illustrates the human consequences of insulin’s high cost in the United States. Its creators hope that it will help spur action toward overall prescription pricing reform.

Pay or Die: A Documentary is scheduled to premiere March 11. It will be shown twice more during the festival, which runs from March 10 to 19 in Austin, Texas. The documentary was co-created and directed by filmmaker and cinematographer Scott Alexander Ruderman, who has type 1 diabetes, and his partner, producer and journalist Rachael Dyer. One of the executive producers is Sarah Silverman, a comic, actor, producer, and health care reform advocate.

The 90-minute film follows three human stories: A mother and young daughter who both have type 1 diabetes and become homeless after spending their rent money on insulin, a young adult diagnosed during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a mother whose 26-year-old son died from diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) after his insulin was rationed.

“As an Australian now living in the U.S. and seeing how the health care system works here, especially for people with type 1 diabetes like Scott, and how access to insulin is a life-or-death situation, has been very eye-opening for me. I’m also half Canadian, and both are countries where access to health care is a human right, not a business,” Ms. Dyer said in an interview.

In response to the March 1 announcement from Eli Lilly about its insulin price cut, the film’s team told this news organization: “While we commend Eli Lilly in taking this first step and hope that Novo Nordisk and Sanofi [the two other major insulin manufacturers] follow suit, it is important to remember that the key issue is not about these companies voluntarily slashing prices; it’s about changing laws so the insulin manufacturers do not have the ability to raise the prices again.

“This is the life-or-death issue that we focus on in our documentary Pay or Die. It’s also important to note that insulin is just one of the many expensive prescription drugs in the U.S., which is why we need to call for reform. Affordable medication needs to be a basic human right within reach for all Americans.”

Physician perspective: Good news on insulin, but broader issues

The film features four physicians. One, Mayo Clinic oncologist/hematologist S. Vincent Rajkumar, MD, has spoken and published widely on insulin prices specifically and U.S. drug costs more broadly.

The other three are Joslin Clinic endocrinologist Elizabeth Halprin, MD, Massachusetts General Hospital internist Leigh Simmons, MD, and New York University physician and essayist Danielle Ofri, MD, PhD.

In an interview after the Lilly announcement, Dr. Rajkumar said, “I think this is very, very good news for patients. ... The fact that they’re doing it means they’re listening to us and listening to patients, which is good. And I do hope that other insulin manufacturers do the same shortly.”

However, he added, “for prescription drug prices and particularly cancer drug prices, there’s more reform that’s needed, and that’s at the policy level. ... The goal of the film was to use insulin to highlight the prescription drug price problem in the U.S.”

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