To be very direct, you see it in going to diabetes clinics where patients like Amber are forced into choices of paying for their rent, their groceries or their medicine. Often, medicine is what drops.
What is so tragic is that same clinic will see the person return much later with an improperly managed condition, like diabetes, in a terrible state, or they wind up with a terrible chronic disease or illness.
Seeing something like that for Amber, something that is entirely preventable, I don't think we want to live in that kind of country. Raina, a 12-year-old, was at the announcement of this. She's an advocate and a kid who has diabetes, and she said to me that no one in this country should not not be able to afford their medicine. Sometimes when somebody is young, they can put something so clearly. I find it hard to disagree with Raina or with Amber that they deserve to be able to get their medication.