His prescriptions and medical supplies cost $420 a month, and he doesn't know how he will pay for treatment for his vision.
Instead of using taxpayers' money to pay overblown prices, we should work to reduce what prescriptions are costing.
According to the American Association of Retired Persons, prescriptions cost elderly people an average of $351 a year.
If you got sick and needed medicine, a prescription might cost, say, fifty bucks a bottle.
Unfortunately, the illegal prescriptions cost him a fortune.
This means that consumers could make a possible saving of £4.70 on a private prescription originally costing £28.20.
Each prescription costs more than $20 a month, even with Medicaid coverage.
A prescription often costs less than creams that simply cover or conceal fine lines.
Now, at age 92, his five prescriptions, mainly for his heart, cost him $25 every three months.