Saline and Walgreen's Pharmacy
Recently, someone on the forum mentioned that they got saline
from GoodRx for less than $11. I went to Walgreen's today
to pick up my saline and they said it would be $49.35. I have
Medicare and AARP/United Health insurance. I thought it might
be for three months, which would be about $16/month, but
they said, no, it's for one month. I said, "You have my GoodRx
card on file, check it with GoodRx". So they said it was $10.28.
I said, "Why didn't you check it?" They said the software just
takes the insurance on a previous prescription. This is the
second time I have noticed that their software is bad.
I had CVS for more than ten years and liked them. When
I got this insurance last year, they said I had to have Walgreen's.
Has anyone else had good or bad experiences with CVS or
Walgreen's?
Harry
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the MAC & Bronchiectasis Support Group.
Rite Aid accepted Good Rx for Sodium Chloride Solution. The final charge was about $15.
Harry where do you get the GoodRx card? Are these the cards that you find in the doctors offices? I am sorry I am so ignorant.
yes you can use the cards you get at the dr. office or best is to go online and carefully enter the name of your drug and amounts etc. and then check the price at pharmacies in your area. A card will be on that page with a bin number a group number etc and that is what the pharmacy needs - they will take that info over the phone but will need all 4 numbers: https://www.goodrx.com/sodium-chloride?form=vial&dosage=4ml-of-3%25&quantity=60&label_override=sodium-chloride
The web site is goodrx.com
I think you go to goodrx.com and create an account and they mail you a card with
your special number on it. Maybe doctor offices have them, but in any case, you
have to associate the card number with your name.
Harry
Thank you
I read somewhere (might have been the AARP news magazine that gets mailed to the house) that pharmacies have to process it through insurance first unless the customer tells them up front to use GoodRx or other discount plans. If they do use your insurance you can tell them to reprocess using your discount such as GoodRx
Thanks. Will do.
Just curious, who pays for GoodRx? If the card is free to the consumer, who then pays a discounted amount for the prescription, who pays GoodRx?
Toni,
It's a little complicated. Read up on Pharmacy Benefit Managers (PBMs)
When you use the card, the pharmacy pays a fee to the PBM, who splits it
with GoodRx.
Harry
I have only good things to say about Walgreens. The poor pharmacists are truly overworked, and the pharmacists at my local Walgreens are angels.