Hello, I was on Rebif Rebiject (?) and switched to Rebidose a year ago.
I was diagnosed in Korea (I am a dual-citizen) and receive health care there. I live in the U.S., without health insurance, and transporting the Rebidose has been of a great hassle because of its bulkiness.
So I was researching about receiving Rebidose/Rebif from a U.S. provider and came across the popular "$0 Co-pay" program by Rebif/MSLifeLines. The preliminary information claims that if patients have no health insurance, they can receive the medication, now as low as $0.
I wanted to see if I can qualify for it, and am going to contact them for it, but how does it work?
Although I lived all my life in the U.S., I never had a family doctor or pharmaceutical, and most posts in this forum state that MSLifelines contacts your healthcare provider (which I have none here).
Thank you for all the information!
I was diagnosed in Korea (I am a dual-citizen) and receive health care there. I live in the U.S., without health insurance, and transporting the Rebidose has been of a great hassle because of its bulkiness.
So I was researching about receiving Rebidose/Rebif from a U.S. provider and came across the popular "$0 Co-pay" program by Rebif/MSLifeLines. The preliminary information claims that if patients have no health insurance, they can receive the medication, now as low as $0.
I wanted to see if I can qualify for it, and am going to contact them for it, but how does it work?
Although I lived all my life in the U.S., I never had a family doctor or pharmaceutical, and most posts in this forum state that MSLifelines contacts your healthcare provider (which I have none here).
Thank you for all the information!