Popping up at the height of the burgeoning healthcare crisis, prescription discount cards present a unique way for average Americans to handle their monthly medications. Prescriptions represent a costly portion of a household budget, particularly with the restructuring taking place in many company paid benefit health plans. Imagine if you could balance out the increase with a prescription card discount that knocks the retail price down by %10 and %85, at no cost to you as the card holder!
The entire healthcare industry will soon resume its contentious place in the media spotlight as a campaign bargaining chip. Caught in the middle of the skirmish, some 50.7 million Americans who go uninsured, whether due to unemployment rates or changes in job benefit qualifications. Another group directly affected, the senior citizens some 90% of whom rely on daily medication to maintain health. Add that to the 58% of non elderly adults taking a prescription medication everyday and there’s no question why Pharmaceuticals generated some $277 million in profits in 2010.
Prescription drugs prices have skyrocketed in the last several decades, and are increasing in price even faster than inflation or basic medical care. Americans increased their usage of prescription medication 39% between 2000 and 2009, while the population itself increased at the same time less than 10%. That’s why now more than ever the average American is seeking out things like prescription discount cards, to help stymie the tide that seems to be ever rising. And thankfully there is one that is available to the public at large, with no enrollment or monthly fees and no paperwork to fill out!
That’s right. The FDI Prescription Discount Card is free to you and you are under no obligation to give us any information about yourself in return. You simply take it to any of the major retailers that accept the card- such as Wal-mart, Costco, Walgreens, CVS, Target and many many others- and you save money. Its as easy as that. Ready for a number that finally works in your favor? In 2010 a quarter of a million people saved over $3 million using the FDI Prescription Discount Card. Everyone else is saving- why shouldn’t you be?
