KEY POINTS
  • The Senate's Inflation Reduction Act comes with a big change to insulin costs for Medicare beneficiaries.
  • The bill, which also needs to be passed by the House, seeks to limit insulin costs to $35 per month for those on Medicare.
  • But efforts to extend that change to patients covered by private insurers is no longer in the legislation.
Amid one of the worst public-health crises in history, a record number of Americans are without health insurance.

The Inflation Reduction Act just passed by the Senate will cap insulin at $35 per month for Medicare beneficiaries.

But that dashed hopes to curb insulin prices for a broader set of the diabetes patient population, about 7.9 million of whom rely on insulin, according to new research from Yale University.