Drugs

Filters
FILTERS
For years, public opinion polls have found that the cost of drugs is Americans’ number one health concern. Over half (55 percent) of all Americans report taking prescription drugs. There are two potential paths for America today: We can expand the role of government in setting drug prices, or we can foster greater individual choice and market competition to hold prices down. The former path would inevitably have unintended consequences, like drug shortages and reduced innovation. The latter would make drugs more affordable and accessible, while also encouraging and rewarding innovation.
Drugs

Combustible Cigarette Use Fluctuating Among North Carolina Youth, E-Cigarette Use Significantly Down from 2019 

Lindsey Stroud | Blog
Drugs

Youth Tobacco Use at Historic Lows, Vaping Down in Utah 

Lindsey Stroud | Blog
Drugs

Youth Vaping Declining Among Montana High Schoolers, Unfortunately Recent Increase in Smoking

Lindsey Stroud | Blog
Drugs

Is California’s Narrow Homelessness Vote The Beginning Of The End Of ‘Housing First’?

Michele Steeb | Op-Ed
Drugs

‘Safe injection sites’ are no answer to addiction

Michele Steeb | Op-Ed
Drugs

Gen Z Is Skeptical About The Pill But Still Cares About Contraception Access

Emily Aldmon | Op-Ed
Drugs

Socialist-Style Drug Price Controls Hurting Patients

Mary Vought | Op-Ed
Drugs

The Conservative Position on Birth Control Is About Individual Responsibility

Hadley Heath Manning | Op-Ed
Drugs

Bipartisan Congressional Effort Takes on PBMs in the Battle to Lower Drug Prices

Havilah Wingfield | Op-Ed
Drugs

These drug price reforms could be great — if Democrats don’t ruin them first

Mary Vought | Op-Ed
Drugs

Rep. Jim Banks: Women’s Sports, Women’s Bill of Rights, and Fentanyl

Beverly Hallberg & Rep. Jim Banks | She Thinks Podcast
Drugs

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly of Biden’s Medicare Proposal

Hadley Heath Manning | Blog

Sign Up For Updates

  • By providing your phone number, you consent to receive text updates — including autodialed and automated messages — from Independent Women (40442) to the number provided. Message frequency may vary. Msg & Data Rates May Apply. Text HELP for help, STOP to opt out. For assistance, contact us at 202-807-9986. SMS opt-in information will not be sold, rented, or shared. Messages may include requests for donations. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.