Women in the U.S. continue to pay significantly higher out-of-pocket healthcare costs than men, with a new report from GoodRx showing an $8.8 billion gap in prescription spending in 2024.
Here are four takeaways:
Women consistently spend 30% more out of pocket on prescriptions than men, totaling $8.5 billion more in 2024 alone. The disparity is driven by higher healthcare utilization, chronic condition management and the costs of female-specific treatments, according to the healthcare technology company's report.
www.beckershospitalreview.com
Here are four takeaways:
Women consistently spend 30% more out of pocket on prescriptions than men, totaling $8.5 billion more in 2024 alone. The disparity is driven by higher healthcare utilization, chronic condition management and the costs of female-specific treatments, according to the healthcare technology company's report.

Women spent $8.8B more than men on medications in 2024: 4 takeaways
"Discover the shocking $8.8 billion gender gap in prescription spending for women in the U.S. and the factors driving this disparity, including higher healthcar