This budget seeks to spend 3 times as much money on zero-emission vehicles than combating the fentanyl crisis.
Editor's note · Context
Carter criticizes budget priorities over addressing the fentanyl crisis.
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Absolutely. And I can tell you, again, from experience as a pharmacist, that they don't it--that it decreases adherence, because they don't come back.
If I could, there was a study done--and it is a little aged now, it was done a little bit over a year ago--by the Berkeley Research Group that showed--and listen, and if you remember one thing, then remember this: It showed that only 37 percent of the price of a drug goes to the pharmaceutical manufacturer, which begs the question, where does the 63 percent go? It goes to the PBM, it goes to the middlemen. That is where the problem is. That is where we can control drug prices at.
I have witnessed what has been going on with bloated, and bureaucracies, and it is very frustrating, especially when it comes to energy and climate.





