CONCORD, N.H. — Today, Patients For Affordable Drugs Action, a national patient advocacy group, launched a campaign in New Hampshire with a new digital ad. The ad features Concord resident Don Kreis, and his daughter, Rose Keller, sharing their experience with high-priced prescription drugs and calling on fellow voters to support candidates who will stand up to Big Pharma and fight to lower drug prices. In addition to today’s ad, the campaign will include digital organizing and grassroots advocacy to ensure politicians get the message: Granite Staters need lower drug prices now.
Watch the ad here.
“By sharing their experience, Rose, a person with cystic fibrosis, and her father, Don, are ensuring New Hampshire’s politicians get the message: Voters want reforms that will lower drug prices,” said David Mitchell, a cancer patient and the president of Patients For Affordable Drugs Action. “It’s so important that people who are struggling under the burden of high prescription drug prices make their voices heard, especially during the current pandemic, when the problem of rising drug prices is only getting worse.”
The five-figure ad will run on digital platforms across the state and feature prominently on a campaign website that includes the stories of patients across the country facing skyrocketing drug prices. The website serves as an action hub and gives New Hampshire residents digital tools to demand that 2020 candidates commit to plans to lower drug prices.
Rose Keller, cystic fibrosis: “The high cost of drug prices has stripped me, and other young patients like me, of the opportunity to dream about what we might be when we grow up.”
Don Kreis, Rose’s father: “For my sake, and for the sake of my daughter, I hope you will vote for candidates who fight Big Pharma and stand up for lower drug prices.”
The New Hampshire campaign is a part of a seven-figure national grassroots campaigncalling on voters in key states across the country to support candidates who will stand up to Big Pharma and fight to lower prescription drug prices. So far, the campaign is also active in Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, Ohio, and Virginia.
According to a recent national survey, 7 out of 10 likely voters say a candidate’s positions on lowering prescription drug prices is important in deciding who to vote for — including 30 percent who say it is very important. Nearly 1 in 3 adults report not taking their medicines as prescribed because of the cost. Big Pharma spent $298.2 million lobbying in 2019 and donated $29.3 million to help elect politicians in the last election cycle.
Patients For Affordable Drugs Action is a political action committee founded to make sure politicians hear from real patients and not just the pharmaceutical industry political machine. Patients For Affordable Drugs Action received principal funding from Action Now Initiative, LLC. Patients For Affordable Drugs Action is an independent organization and refuses funding from any organization that profits from the development or distribution of prescription drugs.
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Paid for by Patients For Affordable Drugs Action, www.p4adaction.org. Not authorized by any candidate or candidate's committee.