As their minivan rolled north, they felt their nerves kick in — but they kept on driving. At the wheel: Lija Greenseid, a rule-abiding Minnesota mom steering her Mazda5 on a cross-border drug run.
Her daughter, who is 13, has Type 1 diabetes and needs insulin. In the United States, it can cost hundreds of dollars per vial. In Canada, you can buy it without a prescription for a tenth of that price.
So, Greenseid led a small caravan last month to the town of Fort Frances, Ontario, where she and five other Americans paid about $1,200 for drugs that would have cost them $12,000 in the United States.
“It felt like we were robbing the pharmacy,” said Quinn Nystrom, a Type 1 diabetic who joined the caravan that day. “It had been years since I had 10 vials in my hands.”
They’re planning another run to Canada this month to stock up on insulin — and to
call attention to their cause. This time, they’ll be taking the scenic route, driving from
Minnesota through Wisconsin, Illinois, and Michigan en route to London, Ontario,
where Frederick Banting began the work that led to the discovery of insulin nearly a
century ago.
Like millions of Americans, Greenseid and Nystrom are stressed and outraged by
the rising costs of prescription drugs in the United States — a problem Republicans
and Democrats alike have promised to fix.
Insulin is a big part of the challenge. More than 30 million Americans have
diabetes, according to the American Diabetes Association. About 7.5 million,
including 1.5 million with Type 1 diabetes, rely on insulin.
Between 2012 and 2016, the cost of insulin for treating Type 1 diabetes nearly
doubled, according to the nonprofit Health Care Cost Institute.
Some pharmaceutical companies, under pressure from U.S. lawmakers, have tried
to reduce the cost for some patients. But many who rely on insulin still struggle.
Large numbers resort to rationing — a dangerous and sometimes deadly practice.
Some diabetics and their families are taking matters into their own hands. They meet
in coffee shops and strip mall parking lots to exchange emergency supplies. An
unknown number travel outside the country to buy the lifesaving drug for less.
None of this is recommended by U.S. officials, and some of it might be illegal under
Food and Drug Administration guidelines. But the organizers of the caravan — their
word, a nod to the migrants traveling in groups through Mexico to the U.S. border - are speaking out about their trip because they want Americans to see how drug
prices push ordinary people to extremes.
“When you have a bad health-care system, it makes good people feel like outlaws,”
Greenseid said. “It’s demeaning. It’s demoralizing. It’s unjust.”
The caravaners aren’t the only ones looking north. Republicans and Democrats have
produced federal and state proposals to import drugs from Canada.
Those ideas aren’t necessarily popular in Ottawa, where many worry that bulk buys
from the United States could cause shortages or higher prices.
Barry Power, director of therapeutic content with the Canadian Pharmacists
Association, said the group is tracking both U.S. drug-buying proposals and reports
of cross-border trade closely but has yet to see a disruption to Canadian insulin
supplies.
He said insulin prices in Canada are controlled through policy, including price caps
and negotiations with manufacturers.
“This is something the U.S. could do,” he said.
When Banting co-discovered insulin in the early 1920s, he balked at commercializing
it because it seemed unethical to profit from a critical drug. He eventually sold his
share of the patent to the University of Toronto for $1, in the hope the drug would
remain widely accessible.
In the nearly 100 years since, insulin has become a lifeline for millions. But the price
in the United States has surged in ways its discoverers could not have predicted.
When Nystrom was diagnosed with diabetes as a child in the late 1990s, she said,
her family paid about $15 to $20 a vial. Now, at 33, she sometimes pays more than
$300 for the same amount.
Nicole Smith-Holt, who drove north with Greenseid and Nystrom, said her son spent
about $1,000 per month on the drug. Alec Raeshawn Smith, an uninsured Type 1
diabetic, rationed his insulin supply due to cost, his mother said. He died in 2017.
Elizabeth Pfiester is founder and executive director of T1International, a British-
based nonprofit that advocates for people with Type 1 diabetes around the world.
“It’s kind of a myth that America has the best health-care system in the world,
because it is set up to allow Americans to go bankrupt or die because they can’t
afford their medicine,” she said.
Pfiester grew up in the United States. One of the reasons her organization is based
overseas, she said, is that the cost of treating her diabetes in the United States is so
high.
“What I think is quite clear is that these companies will charge what they can get
away with,” she said. “They have been able to get away with costs going up because
of a broken and opaque health-care system.”
A spokeswoman for the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America
noted that drug companies are increasingly offering rebates on insulin in the United
States — but they aren’t always reaching consumers.
“Too often, these negotiated discounts and rebates are not shared with patients,
resulting in the sickest patients paying higher out-of-pocket costs to subsidize the
healthy,” PhRMA spokeswoman Holly Campbell said in an email. “This is the
opposite of how health insurance is supposed to work.”
Greenseid, who has purchased insulin for her daughter in six countries, said U.S.
prices stand out as not just high, but as unpredictable. As people bounce between
insurance plans and navigate rebates, she said, you often “have no idea how much
you are going to pay.”
In the United States, you can buy some types of insulin without a prescription. But to
get the newer analog insulin on which Type 1 diabetics rely, you need to visit or call
your doctor.
If Nystrom forgets to pack enough for an extended trip, she said, she needs to get
her endocrinologist on the phone. In Canada, she can walk into a pharmacy and get
the analog insulin she needs.
“The attitude up there is: ‘Why would someone buy insulin if they didn’t need it?’?”
Nystrom said.
On their first trip north, the caravaners received support from Canadians, they said,
but also accusations that they were looting drug supplies.
“We heard a lot of comments like, ‘Canada needs to put up a wall,’” Smith-Holt said.
“I was like, ‘Oh, come on.’?” Before the group set out for Fort Frances, they said, they
called ahead to check that the local pharmacy had enough to fill their order without
disrupting supply.
They see buying in Canada as a short-term emergency measure and a way to call
attention to U.S. pricing — not the answer.
“I don’t think that the solution is going outside the United States,” Greenseid said.
“The reason they have lower prices is because they have put in regulations to make
sure their citizens are not paying too much. We have not yet made that decision in
the U.S.”
LaShawn McIver is senior vice president for government affairs and advocacy at the
American Diabetes Association.
“Insulin is not a luxury, it is a matter of life and death,” she wrote in an emailed
statement. “Action to reduce the high out-of-pocket costs that endanger the lives of
the millions of Americans who depend on this medication is critical and urgently
needed.”
A spokeswoman for the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees
the FDA, said the Trump administration is focused on lowering drug prices.
“President Trump and [Health AMD Human Services] Secretary [Alex] Azar are firmly
committed to getting drug prices down,” spokeswoman Caitlin B. Oakley wrote in an
email. “They are both very open to the importation of prescription drugs as long as it
can be done safely and can deliver real results for American patients.”
Until things change, the caravaners say, they’ll keep driving.
Their first trip led to queries from families across the country, they said, including
Type 1 diabetics, parents of children with diabetes and family members supporting
elderly relatives with diabetes. Some want to join.
So when they head north in a few weeks, they’ll switch from family cars to a
chartered bus.