
Maryland lawmakers want limits on pricey prescriptions, say health care system is ‘failing us'
BALTIMORE — For most of her life, Erica Miller suffered from a medical condition she didn't know she had.
When she finally got a diagnosis and treatment, the cost of her medication varied wildly month-to-month from as low as $45 to as high as $600 — even with insurance. She couldn't afford the care she needed.
Maryland lawmakers want to help residents like Miller who battle exorbitant prescription prices, and they are pushing bills in the state House and Senate to limit costs.
'Our health care system is not just broken,' said House Health and Government Operations Vice Chair Bonnie Cullison. 'It's really failing us.'
Throughout her life, Miller could not silence the noise in her brain.
Miller, a mother and Baltimore resident, has adult ADHD — a diagnosis she didn't receive until she took her son to get tested. As the doctor described the symptoms, she said a 'lightbulb went off.'
'It was a moment that was just kind of an eye-opener,' Miller said.
She tried to manage it on her own for a while, but it became difficult. Miller found a therapist and began trying to manage her ADHD with medication.
That's when she found Vyvanse, a prescription drug used to treat ADHD and binge-eating disorder. Miller told The Baltimore Sun about when she knew she had finally gotten her dosage right. She said that she cried on the phone to her then-husband, telling him her 'brain is finally quiet.'
'My mind is quiet, and I'm like, 'Is this what it feels like?'' Miller said. 'For anyone who has not experienced or suffered from ADHD, your brain can be very, very busy. For the first time, I didn't experience an 'on' brain.'
Miller was now able to focus and advance in her career. But she ran into a snag with the high and inconsistent costs of her prescription.
House Bill 424 and Senate Bill 357, sponsored by Cullison, Del. Jennifer White Holland, Senate Education, Energy, and the Environment Committee Chair Brian Feldman and Sen. Dawn Gile, all Democrats, seek to expand the authority of the Maryland Prescription Drug Affordability Board and allow it to set upper payment limits on medications for Marylanders.
Cullison said that if the board lowers the cost of prescriptions, commercial market insurance companies would be required to lower premiums or implement different copay or coinsurance structures.
Under Maryland law, the Prescription Drug Affordability Board, a five-member independent agency created by the legislature in 2019, can only limit the costs paid by state and local government agencies for prescription medication. It is currently looking at possibly setting upper payment limits for Jardiance and Farxiga, which are used to treat diabetes. Cullison said these two medications represent the 'single biggest cost for state employee health plans.'
Between 2020 and 2024, the price of those drugs in the state skyrocketed from $14.5 million to $29.3 million. Cullison said that Maryland has contributed $870 million in research grants to develop both.
Dr. Andrew York, the executive director of the Prescription Drug Affordability Board, said cost review studies are currently being performed on six additional drugs.
Under the bill, upper payment consideration for the general public would not go into place until the board implements payment limits for purchases through the state and local governments.
Drug prices are negotiated between manufacturers and insurance company pharmacy benefit managers.
'Pharmaceutical companies are not regulated in any way except for their product. Their product is regulated, their pricing is not,' said Cullison. 'It was supposed to be managed by competition, but … I don't think competition is working on behalf of the people who need the drugs.'
Testifying in opposition to the bill, Kristen Parde, the deputy vice president of state advocacy for PhRMA, said that establishing upper payment limits could disrupt the pharmaceutical supply chain and 'threaten patient access to needed medicines.'
'[Upper payment limits] create uncertainty in a complex system, making it harder for providers to secure medications at state-prescribed prices, leading to treatment disruptions, or inability to access medicine for patients,' she said.
Patients testified before lawmakers Thursday, asking them to consider what the potential reduced availability of life-saving drugs could mean for them.
'This legislation could make it harder for patients to access the treatments they need to survive and manage diagnoses like breast cancer,' said Marquita Goodluck, a breast cancer survivor. 'While the goal of lowering drug costs is important, the [Prescription Drug Affordability Board] has yet to deliver on this promise.'
Former Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, vetoed the 2020 bill that was poised to create the funding stream for the Prescription Drug Affordability Board during his second term as governor, citing its cost and the coronavirus pandemic as his reasons to delay its work.
Del. Nic Kipke, an Anne Arundel County Republican, said Thursday that he is worried price controls issued by the board could lead to rationed prescriptions or worse products.
York called upper payment limits 'a tool in the toolbox,' saying that they are not necessarily the answer for every situation. He said that the first action the board would likely take is to see if it can promote market competition.
Cullison said Wednesday that companies have not refused to sell their drugs in other developed countries with regulatory standards, using Germany as an example.
Regarding medication pricing, the German federal government functions similarly to the Prescription Drug Affordability Board. There, a group of stakeholders and medical experts negotiate the price with each other and then take their negotiation to drug companies.
The results are stark when compared to U.S. prices.
In America, Skyrizi, which is used to treat moderate-to-severe plaque psoriasis, has a wholesale acquisition cost of $21,017. It's $3,711 in Germany.
'The German health care system is not like ours, I'm going to say that out front,' Cullison said. 'But these are the same drugs, being made by the same companies that we're using here in America.'
Big price tags on prescriptions have a tangible impact on Marylanders.
The high, varying prices of her prescriptions coincided with stressful events in Miller's life. She got divorced and was no longer insured through her ex-husband's health care plan. She was now a single mother, and keeping up with the cost of her medication was becoming untenable.
'Even with a decent job to accommodate for the varying costs, it was still a struggle,' Miller said. 'I have to take the prescription. I'm in executive leadership. I need to be able to make sure that I can function at that level so I can continue to provide for my family.'
She said she was having to make decisions between paying rent or paying for her medication. There were a couple of months that she didn't take it.
'The 'quiet' mind went away, and the 'noisy' mind came back, and trying to navigate that along with a divorce — it just became too much,' Miller said.
What Miller has experienced is not uncommon. According to Cullison, one in three Marylanders skip doses, ration drugs, or do not pick up prescriptions from the pharmacy because of the costs.
There are also racial disparities in access to affordable drugs.
According to White Holland, Black and Latino adults over 65 are nearly twice as likely to report difficulty affording medications when compared to white people in the same age bracket.
Not taking her prescription began to affect Miller's work performance. She switched to Focalin, a different ADHD medication. The cost was a consistent $90 each month, but she said it doesn't work as effectively for her as Vyvanse did.
Miller said she ended up losing her job. She pointed to her inability to manage her ADHD with a drug that worked for her.
'I think a lot of people don't think that being a middle-class corporate professional, that they could be impacted,' said Miller. 'I didn't expect to experience a divorce. I did not expect now, at this point in my life, to be a single mother of two. I didn't expect for this to happen, and now I'm having to juggle financial resources because these pharmaceutical companies want to play Russian roulette with what we can afford.'
----------

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
ADHD drugs back in the spotlight after study debunks rising prevalence
An increasing number of patients are seeking support for attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), with pharmacological-based treatments an important part of medical care for the neurodevelopmental condition. A study published this week in the Journal of Affective Disorders has found that greater awareness and acceptance around the disorder has led to more people seeking help. The research, led by a team at King's College, London, debunks claims that the disorder is 'naturally' on the rise. The data comes as a national taskforce in England investigates what this rising demand for support means for the NHS. Figures published in May 2025 by NHS England estimated there were nearly 2.5 million people in England with ADHD. This includes more than 550,000 currently waiting for an assessment. Every month 20,000 more people are referred for support, a rise of 13% compared to last year. Pharmaceutical Technology looks at some of the current options in the UK and casts an eye ahead to what the future drug landscape might contain. The first choice for patients with ADHD is methylphenidate, which belongs to a class of drugs called central nervous system (CNS) stimulants. The drug, which works by blocking the reuptake of norepinephrine and dopamine, increases activity in the brain, including regions associated with attention and behaviour. It is known under the brand names Ritalin, manufactured by Novartis, and Johnson and Johnson's Concerta. There is also Equasym and Xenidate, among others. Lisdexamfetamine dimesylate is also used to treat patients with ADHD. Like methylphenidate, lisdexamfetamine is a CNS stimulant and acts as a norepinephrine and dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI). This drug is known under the brand name, among others, as Elvanse and Vyvanse, both manufactured by Takeda. While stimulants are fast acting, with side effects felt soon after administration, non-stimulant drugs take longer, yet can offer an alternative if drugs like methylphenidate and lisdexamfetamine dimesylate do not work. While improving, access to pharmacological-based treatments is still impaired amid an ongoing global shortage that began in September 2023. Methylphenidate and lisdexamfetamine were primarily affected – the shortage arising due to a combination of manufacturing issues and increased global demand. A separate study published in The American Journal of Managed Care in March suggested that overdiagnosis of ADHD is fuelling the shortage of stimulation medications. One of the most advanced candidate drugs, and one with notable buzz surrounding it, is Axsome's Sunosi (solriamfetol). Sunosi, which is also an NDRI but not a conventional stimulant, met its primary endpoint in a Phase III trial (NCT05972044) earlier this year. The medication led to a 45% drop in ADHD symptoms. As measured by the Adult ADHD Investigator Symptom Rating Scale (AISRS), 150mg Sunosi dosed achieved average reductions from baseline of 17.7 points, compared to 14.3 points for placebo. Sunosi is already approved in the UK to treat excessive daytime sleepiness (EDS) in adults with narcolepsy, with or without cataplexy. Certain patients with obstructive sleep apnoea (OSA) are also eligible to take the medication. In 2022, Axsome paid $53m up front to acquire Sunosi from Jazz Pharmaceuticals. A drug with a recent approval extension in the US, though not the UK, was Supernus Pharmaceuticals' Qelbree (viloxazine extended-release capsules). The mechanism of action of Qelbree, though unclear, is thought to be through inhibiting the reuptake of norepinephrine. Originally approved for children in 2021, the FDA updated the drug's label in January this year to include adults. ADHD treatments were in the political crosshairs in the US recently. The disorder, along with autism, was singled out by the Trump administration for an 'over-utilisation of medication'. Pharmaceutical intervention remains a helpful part of managing the disorder, though it is part of a combination of treatments that also include coaching and lifestyle changes. "ADHD drugs back in the spotlight after study debunks rising prevalence" was originally created and published by Pharmaceutical Technology, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
Four ways NIOSH's Spokane Research Lab, now facing closure, has improved workers' safety
Jun. 7—Spokane is home to the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health's biggest facility in the western United States, where researchers have worked to prevent harm to workers in mining, commercial fishing, wildland firefighting and other dangerous jobs. Now, NIOSH's Spokane Research Laboratory is at risk of closure after the Trump administration notified nearly all its employees in March that their jobs would be eliminated by the beginning of July. Those terminations are on hold after courts in California ruled that President Donald Trump's mass firing of federal workers likely violated the Constitution, but the more than 80 employees in Spokane remain on paid administrative leave and their fate is unclear. Facing pressure from both Democrats and Republicans in Congress, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who leads NIOSH's parent agency, has brought back about 300 of the 900 workers who were terminated — none of them in Spokane. The Department of Health and Human Services did not respond to questions from The Spokesman-Review about the rationale for the mass firing and any plans to reinstate more workers. Here are four examples of the research NIOSH employees in Spokane have conducted to improve safety for workers. 1. Protecting oil and gas workers from deadly fumes For years, federal regulations required workers in the oil and gas industry to open hatches on top of huge storage tanks to take samples of the oil inside. In 2013, a doctor at the University of California, San Francisco contacted NIOSH and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, a regulatory agency, about the deaths of two of those workers. Working with the physician and OSHA, NIOSH researchers in Spokane used their database of fatalities in the oil and gas industry and found a total of nine similar deaths that occurred from 2010 to 2014. The deceased workers ranged in age from 20 to 63, and coroners attributed most of the deaths to heart disease, with no autopsy conducted in one case, but the NIOSH data showed a clear pattern. The truck drivers and other workers, who often worked alone, were found "collapsed over open hatch" or "slumped over on catwalk next to tank" — all while doing the same job task, "collecting sample" or "gauging." After NIOSH researchers identified the pattern of deaths, all likely due to workers opening a hatch and being engulfed in a plume of hydrocarbon gases and air that lacked oxygen, they worked with other federal agencies and the oil and gas industry to implement new regulations and safer methods of gauging the tanks' contents. 2. Detecting airborne silica to prevent lung disease in miners At hard-rock mines like Lucky Friday in the Silver Valley east of Coeur d'Alene miners can't get to valuable minerals without blasting, crushing and grinding a lot of crystalline silica, the most common mineral on earth. But when a miner breathes in silica dust, it damages the lungs and causes silicosis, an incurable disease that causes severe breathing problems and can lead to death. Currently, the standard method of measuring airborne silica involves sending a sample to a lab and waiting days or even weeks for a result, said Art Miller, a particle scientist who researched silica detection at the Spokane Research Lab until he retired in 2020. Miller and his colleagues at NIOSH facilities in Spokane and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, have worked for years to develop faster methods of detecting dangerous levels of silica dust. The researchers have developed a tool that produces same-day test results, but a project in Spokane to create a wearable, real-time silica monitor that would immediately alert workers to dangerous levels of dust is now in jeopardy. 3. Making commercial fishing vessels safer The NIOSH facility in Spokane houses the agency's research on maritime safety, covering waters from Alaska's Bering Sea to the Gulf of Mexico, which the Trump administration recently renamed as the Gulf of America. After a 15-year-old boy working on a shrimp boat in the Gulf died in 2012 when his clothing got caught in a winch, the Coast Guard asked NIOSH to look into the prevalence of such entanglements and find a solution. Researchers found 35 severe injuries, eight of them fatal, had occurred on shrimping vessels between 2000 and 2011 when workers got entangled in winches used to haul nets out of the water. NIOSH designed guards to fit several common winch models and made them available to shrimpers. The crab fishing season in the Bering Sea, made famous by the reality TV show "Deadliest Catch," has long been one of the world's most dangerous workplaces. From 1990 to 1999, an average of eight crab fishermen died each season. When NIOSH researchers analyzed the fatalities, they found that most were caused by boats capsizing because they were overladen with crab pots as they raced to maximize their catch in the brief season. Based on those findings, the Coast Guard began enforcing limits on crab pots, and fatalities in the still-dangerous industry fell to an average of one per year in the following 15 years. 4. Keeping miners safe deep underground The Lucky Friday Mine in Mullan, owned by Coeur d'Alene-based Hecla Mining, has the deepest mine shaft in the world at more than 9,500 feet underground. The mine shut down for more than a year and required more than $30 million in upgrades after a rock burst and other accidents killed two miners and injured seven others in 2011. NIOSH's Spokane Mining Research Division has worked with companies to improve safety at Lucky Friday and other hard-rock mines in the western United States for decades, developing techniques and technologies that have been applied by miners around the world. Brad Seymour, a NIOSH mining engineer and union steward in Spokane, started researching ground support methods to prevent deadly collapses in 1986, when the office was part of the now-defunct U.S. Bureau of Mines. Early in his career, he helped to improve cemented backfill techniques — filling underground voids with mill tailings and other material to prevent collapse — at the Cannon Mine in Wenatchee. Those improvements were adopted by other mines, he said, helping fuel a gold mining boom in Nevada in the 1990s and now improving safety and efficiency at North Idaho mines like Lucky Friday and the Galena Complex. Orion Donovan Smith's work is funded in part by members of the Spokane community via the Community Journalism and Civic Engagement Fund. This story can be republished by other organizations for free under a Creative Commons license. For more information on this, please contact our newspaper's managing editor.
Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
7 Relationship Habits That Secretly May Be Signs Of ADHD
Do you find it difficult to focus on a task when your partner is talking to you? Do you go to bed much later than your partner? Do you take comments from your partner personally, even when they don't mean to criticize you? While everyone in relationships may experience these scenarios, when they happen often or to an extreme, they can be signs of ADHD (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder). ADHD 'is not just a deficit of attention or someone being hyperactive … [it's] very much about self-management.' said Dr. Lidia Zylowska, associate professor at the University of Minnesota School of Medicine and author of 'The Mindfulness Prescription for Adult ADHD.' 'It's really a different way of experiencing … or reacting to the world.' ADHD affects a person's executive functions, which are skills in the brain that help plan, organize, prioritize, complete tasks and regulate emotions. 'All of these play into relationships and … dynamics between couples,' explained Sharon Saline, a clinical psychologist who specializes in ADHD. '[And] sometimes the partner who doesn't have ADHD assumes that the partner who does have ADHD is doing things on purpose that they're not [intentionally] doing.' It's important for both partners to understand each other so they can have compassion and build a strong relationship, Zylowska added. We talked to therapists about habits in relationships that could be signs of ADHD — and tips for both partners for working through their differences: You may have 'challenges with emotional regulation, [such as] losing your temper, being overwhelmed by anxiety [or] having big feelings that you struggle to rein in,' Saline said. This includes a 'low frustration tolerance,' explained Terry Matlen, psychotherapist, founder of ADDConsults and author of 'The Queen of Distraction.' For example, you may have a tantrum about something that seems trivial, like losing the TV remote. 'This can … cause … friction and anger in the [other] partner and embarrassment in the person with ADHD,' she said. It's important to recognize what your triggers are and how you respond to them, she advised. 'Instead of acting … out in ways that can hurt others, give yourself a timeout,' she said. 'Head to the bathroom or other quiet space, [and] talk it out to yourself: 'I'm really angry/upset/hurt because ….'' Deep breathing, taking a warm bath or journaling also can help you calm down. 'If it's too late and you've lost control, apologize to your partner and make a plan for how to manage this moving forward,' she said. A lot of people who have ADHD may experience rejection sensitive dysphoria, which is a 'hypersensitivity to rejection or negative feedback like criticism,' explained Billy Roberts, founder and clinical director of Focused Mind ADHD Counseling. 'You may be actually quite sensitive to how you are scanning and noticing what's happening in the relationship,' Zylowska said. The person with ADHD may perceive that someone is trying to hurt or reject them, even when that's not necessarily happening, Matlen added. The person who doesn't have ADHD may 'tiptoe around their partner' because they're afraid of hurting their feelings. The person with ADHD may shut down because they're anticipating rejection or overact when their partner really isn't trying to criticize, Roberts said. Just being aware of the fact that this can happen when you have ADHD and being able to talk about this with your partner can make a difference, he advised. You could say something like, 'I got the impression that you were mad at me when I said that I couldn't pick up the laundry. Can we talk through that?' Roberts explained. Also ask yourself, 'Am I inferring tone here … or did [my partner] explicitly criticize me?' While it can come from impulsivity, 'people with ADHD [may also] interrupt because they got really excited about something that they just heard,' said Marcy Caldwell, clinical psychologist and founder and director of The Center For ADHD. But the other partner may be thinking, 'You didn't care about what I had to say.' It can be helpful when the person with ADHD owns their behavior and says something like, 'I know I interrupt a lot, and I'm really sorry. … How does it feel to you?' she said. And explain the reason behind the behavior, whether you are wanting to add to what they're saying or don't want to forget something. There also are behavioral tips that work for some people to help them not interrupt, like sitting on their hands or writing a thought down instead of saying it verbally, she said. Matlen also recommends looking at the person's lips while they are talking to hold their attention. 'It engages more than one of our senses: visual and audio,' she said. 'Using a fidget can also work wonders to keep your mind sharp and attentive.' If the partner with ADHD is hyper-focused on something, they may have a difficult time being pulled away from that, Caldwell explained. 'Let's say the ADHD person is writing or working on something and the partner comes in to ask a quick question, that can lead to some irritability or … [the partner feeling completely ignored],' Caldwell said. 'It just is really hard for an ADHD brain to be taken off task.' She recommends that the person with ADHD use a visual cue when they need to focus, such as wearing headphones or closing the door. Explain to your partner that's a sign to please not interrupt you unless it's an emergency or something time-sensitive. Someone with ADHD may have a hard time feeling internally motivated to do a task or goal if it's not interesting or feels particularly overwhelming, Roberts explained. Their partner may perceive it as that they are intentionally not doing a task, but in reality, their brains are just processing it differently. 'A neurotypical brain tends to be motivated by important things and by priorities, [like] it's important to do the dishes at the end of the night,' Caldwell said, adding that someone with ADHD tends 'to be motivated by competition, novelty, interest and pressure.' For example, someone may wait until 'there are no clean dishes and then it feels important to clean.' Have a conversation with your partner about what they like to do and do well, and take that into account when you're both deciding how to divide up household tasks, Saline said. For instance, maybe one partner likes to cook while the other prefers to handle maintenance of the house. Using apps that gamify chores and setting reminder notifications also can help both partners stay on track, Caldwell added. Someone with ADHD often feels 'like evening is the time … to catch up on everything,' Zylowska said. 'When they do get in bed … they may have trouble unwinding and listen to music, scroll through their phone or watch TV.' This can cause issues if their partner goes to bed earlier and is a light sleeper or really cares about going to bed at the same time as their partner. 'The … partner may feel isolated and lonely, [and] sexual relations may become sporadic,' Matlen said. 'The noise of an active, awake partner [also] can create sleep issues for the [other person].' Matlen recommends setting time before bed to cuddle together, even if each partner goes to sleep at a different time. If the night owl is disturbing the sleep of the other person, some couples may decide on separate bedrooms and connect other times throughout the day. Or if it's important for them to be in bed at the same time, one person could use headphones or a reading light while the other sleeps, Zylowska said. 'Finding ways to accept each other's rhythms versus trying to force them out of it is the way to go,' Matlen said. 'The spontaneity, intensity and fun that [a person with ADHD] can bring to you as a couple can be incredibly refreshing,' Matlen said. For example, the person with ADHD may always be looking for creative date ideas or new hobbies to try with their partner, Caldwell said. Or maybe they suggest spontaneous ways to spice up their romance, like a foot massage or taking a bubble bath, Matlen added. '[Usually] we partner with people who bring something different than what we [do],' Caldwell said. And having an appreciation for this and how your strengths complement each other is an important foundation for a healthy relationship. 'Tossing' Could Be A Potential Sign Of ADHD. Do You Do It? 12 Things Not To Say To Someone Who Has ADHD We Have ADHD. These Are The Apps We Swear By.