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  • Every day in this country,

  • families are forced to make impossible choices

  • when it comes to their health care.

  • Like Kimberly, who said,

  • "There was times I had to choose between my food and my pills.

  • It wasn't luxury stuff, because I didn't make that much.

  • It was like, 'Can I get shampoo or conditioner?'

  • Things you take for granted."

  • And Debbie, who said,

  • "You put your medicine in one hand,

  • your living costs in the other.

  • OK. Well, what am I going to do?

  • Am I going to get my medicine

  • or am I going to pay my bills?

  • Well, I can't live without my medicine,

  • but I can't live if I don't pay my bills."

  • Ten thousand people die every month in this country,

  • because they don't take the medicine that they need.

  • More people die from not taking medications

  • than opioid overdoses and car accidents combined.

  • But you can't take medicine if you can't afford it.

  • Today, the average household spends 3,000 dollars a year

  • on medications.

  • About a third of folks who are uninsured

  • said that they stopped taking medicine as prescribed

  • because of cost.

  • Even folks with insurance,

  • if they make under 35,000 dollars a year,

  • half of them report skipping the medications

  • if their insurance doesn't cover it.

  • So there are 10 million adults like Kimberly and like Debbie

  • who are forced to make impossible choices every day.

  • We all know that prescription drug prices are too high.

  • And our health care system,

  • that makes some folks uninsured and other folks underinsured,

  • doesn't prioritize people who need access now

  • and need medications now.

  • Ten million -- it's a big number,

  • but it's also a solvable number,

  • because there's also 10 billion dollars

  • of perfectly good, unused medication

  • that goes to waste.

  • So this is an injustice on two sides:

  • people not getting the medicine that they need to survive and to thrive,

  • and that very same medication being sent to a medical waste incinerator

  • to be destroyed.

  • This waste is unconscionable, but it also offers an opportunity.

  • I started SIRUM,

  • a not-for-profit technology company, with my cofounders Adam and George,

  • to turn discarded medications into a lifeline,

  • just like the medications in this warehouse.

  • We may not be able to fix

  • all the ways in which our health care system is failing us,

  • but we can fix this one.

  • Medications come from manufacturers and wholesalers who have safety stock,

  • and when it's short-dated, they destroy it.

  • It also comes from health care facilities

  • like hospitals, pharmacies and nursing homes,

  • who end up with surplus when a patient stops taking medication

  • or when they pass away.

  • We can use this untapped source of medications

  • to supply all 10 million people who need medications.

  • And we can do this today.

  • SIRUM gets surplus medications

  • by putting recycling bins into these hundreds of facilities

  • that have surplus.

  • They fill the bin, and when the box is full,

  • SIRUM initiates a courier pickup to pick up that medication,

  • and we handle the shipping, the tracking, the manifests and the tax receipt.

  • Medicine donors want to donate because it's actually cheaper and easier

  • than the highly regulated medicine destruction process.

  • And there are strong tax incentives to actually donate.

  • We then deliver those donated medications to people who need it.

  • A new prescription comes in,

  • and our platform matches that patient need with the inventory that's available.

  • Our platform then generates a warehouse pick list,

  • the medications are picked and the prescriptions filled.

  • We are building the 21st-century pharmacy experience

  • that low-income families deserve.

  • Patients can register in under five minutes

  • and have access to over 500 different medications,

  • a stable list of medications for everything from heart disease

  • to mental health conditions,

  • actually representing over 75 percent of all prescriptions prescribed

  • in the United States today.

  • We also partner with a network of doctors, nurses and case managers

  • at community health centers and free clinics

  • that refer patients to the service.

  • We make it as easy for these health care providers

  • to have a prescription filled with donated medications

  • as it is to send a prescription to a local pharmacy.

  • And patients can pick up medications on-site at one of our partners

  • or have medications delivered directly to their home.

  • By circumventing the traditional supply chain,

  • we're able to offer flat, transparent pricing --

  • about two dollars for a month's supply of most medications.

  • And that allows a predictable, affordable price

  • that folks can actually budget for.

  • We've already supplied enough medication for 150,000 people.

  • But we can do more.

  • Our goal is to reach one million people

  • with approaching a billion dollars of unused medicine

  • in the next five years,

  • scaling our program to 12 states.

  • At this scale, we can actually cover communities that are home

  • to 40 percent of the 10 million people

  • who lack consistent, affordable access.

  • Our direct service to one million people

  • will drive price competition for so many more.

  • Walmart launched one of the only price innovations in pharmacy

  • in 2006,

  • by offering a limited list of medications

  • for a flat fee of four dollars.

  • This sparked incredible change.

  • It sparked competitors to offer other lists

  • and price match guarantees.

  • By targeting transparent, affordable medications

  • into these new states,

  • we can actually drive regional price competition

  • that drives down the prices for entire low-income communities.

  • Our health care system is complex.

  • It is daunting.

  • It feels impossible to make headway.

  • But we can completely reimagine medicine access.

  • By using surplus medications as a beachhead to force change

  • into this multibillion dollar industry,

  • we can create radical access to medications

  • based on a fundamental belief

  • that people who live in one of the wealthiest nations in the world

  • can and should have access to medicine that they need

  • to survive and to thrive.

  • I do not pretend to have all of the answers

  • to fix all of the problems in our health care system.

  • But getting medications to the millions of people

  • who need it to live a healthy life,

  • saving medicine to save lives --

  • that is something we can do today.

  • Thank you.

Every day in this country,

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