Connecticut
Prescription drug discount card announced for Connecticut residents
(WFSB) – The cost of prescription drugs keeps going up, but some relief is coming.
Connecticut is launching a drug discount card.
This new drug card could save you quite a bit of money, and 98-percent of pharmacies in Connecticut will accept it.
“It’s increased significantly, and in terms of out of pocket costs,” said Vita White, AARP volunteer.
White said the drug she takes has tripled in cost, and like many seniors on fixed budgets, she is struggling to pay for it.
“Connecticut will be offering a drug discount card to each and every resident of this state,” said Sean Scanlon, Connecticut Comptroller.
Connecticut is launching a drug discount card on October 2. It will save 80-percent on generic medications and 20-percent on brand names.
Pharmacists see those forced to make tough choices because their drugs are too expensive.
“Should I breathe or take the medicine, it’s a daily thing here,” said Ed Anulewicz, Arrow Pharmacist.
While everyone can apply for the discount card, it benefits those on insurance plans with high deductibles, the uninsured and seniors on Medicare. The only thing you can’t do is use your card and your insurance at the same time.
Crestor is a name brand drug to reduce cholesterol. If you pay cash, it’s about $900 for a 3-month supply. The card will save you $180.
The generic version is about $30. The savings would be $24.
Lawmakers passed this program earlier this year. Connecticut now joins three other states to negotiate drug prices.
“We have the best health care in Connecticut but it’s unfair, unequal and unaffordable. Until the federal government steps in we are doing what we can in the state of Connecticut,” said Gov. Ned Lamont.
The card does not force drug companies to reduce costs, but it does give people a break. There is no actual card, you have to download an app and apply.
For more information on the card and how to apply, go to: arrayrxcard.com.
Lamont’s office listed examples of savings using the discount card:
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Connecticut
Connecticut readers get the shaft from newspaper’s vulgar Jets headline blunder
Ouch!
A newspaper in Connecticut had an unfortunate typo involving Jets linebacker C.J. Mosley’s herniated disc on Monday.
This past Monday, The Chronicle, a newspaper covering Eastern Connecticut, published an AP story on the front page of its sports section in the print edition that referred to Mosley’s “herniated d–k.”
Mosley has missed the Jets’ four games with the injury — the one in his neck, that is.
In the copy, Mosley’s injury was not shafted, getting described correctly in the nut graph.
The unfortunate phallacy did not go unnoticed: in an extra twist, the error went viral when it was posted on the X account of David Coverdale, the 73-year-old singer of Whitesnake.
An editor for The Chronicle told The Post that the newspaper would be issuing a correction in the paper.
Last week, prior to the Jets’ loss to the Colts, Mosley spoke about how he hoped to return after the Jets’ bye, when they host the Seahawks on Dec. 1.
“That’s definitely the goal,” he said. “I’m in a position where I’ve played a lot of football. Me missing this time won’t hurt me as much as another guy that might need this opportunity. It’s about safety at the end of the day. When I go home, I’m Clint Mosley. I’m C.J. I’m not the football player.”
Mosley said the birth of his daughter, who arrived the week after his injury, put things in perspective for him.
“I had a full week of having a normal neck and ever since then every time I’m looking down, my neck’s hurting,” Mosley said. “It puts things in perspective. There’s a lot of life after football. When I’m done playing, I want to make sure I’m 100 percent.”
From head to toe and everywhere in between.
Connecticut
Another Earthquake Hits CT: Did You Feel It?: CT News
Patch AM CT brings you the breaking and trending news stories from all across Connecticut each weekday morning. At any point, you can find your local Patch and catch up on those stories here.
A second earthquake hit Connecticut this week, and this one was a higher magnitude earthquake than the previous one, according to the United States Geological Survey.>>>Read More.
A collision between a car and tractor-trailer on the highway turned fatal, state police said.>>>Read More.
A suspected drunken driver was corralled by an alert citizen and state police, officials said.>>>Read More.
Here are the latest updates on Thursday’s storm for Connecticut, including some changes for Friday.>>>Read More.
In Connecticut, there are a few exceptions to what has been a trend since 2019 for retail stores to close on Thanksgiving Day.>>>Read More.
The holidays are coming in hot: One glance at CT’s events calendar would make you think we were already waist-deep in garland and tinsel.>>>Read More.
Connecticut
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