Affordability Check
How to afford Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70
Generic name: Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70
Pick how you're covered. We'll show you the cheapest legitimate way to get Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70 — your insurance copay, manufacturer savings, charity grants, or cash price. It takes 30 seconds and we never ask for your personal information.
Pick an option above to see your specific path.
Different insurance means different laws and different savings. For example, Medicare patients cannot use manufacturer copay cards (federal law) — but the manufacturer almost always has a Patient Assistance Program that gives the drug free.
About Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70 and its cost
What is this medication? Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70 is a medical gas mixture composed of thirty percent oxygen and seventy percent nitrogen. It is primarily used to provide supplemental respiratory support to patients who require a higher concentration of oxygen than what is found in natural room air, which contains approximately twenty-one percent oxygen. This specific ratio is prescribed to help maintain healthy blood oxygen levels while ensuring that the concentration is not so high that it causes respiratory complications in sensitive individuals. This medication is often utilized in hospital environments for patients with chronic respiratory illnesses or during the recovery phase following surgical procedures. It can also be used as a stable carrier gas for delivering other inhaled medications via nebulizers. Because it contains a high percentage of nitrogen, it helps prevent the collapse of the air sacs in the lungs, a condition that can sometimes occur when patients breathe pure or highly concentrated oxygen for extended periods of time.
Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70 is made by a pharmaceutical manufacturer. Like most brand-name drugs, it's priced at a high list price — but patients rarely pay that list price. The options above are the real paths most people use to get it affordably.
Common questions
What's the cheapest way to afford Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70?
It depends on your insurance. On Medicare, apply for the manufacturer's Patient Assistance Program (PAP) — it gives the drug free if you meet income requirements. With private insurance, the manufacturer copay card usually drops your copay to $0-$25. Uninsured patients should compare the PAP with Cost Plus Drugs cash price.
Can I use a copay card with Medicare for Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70?
No — federal law (the Anti-Kickback Statute) prohibits manufacturer copay cards on Medicare, Medicaid, TriCare, and VA prescriptions. But the manufacturer has a separate Patient Assistance Program for Medicare beneficiaries. Check the options above.
Does my Medicare Part D plan cover Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70?
Part D coverage varies by plan. We query the CMS Prescription Drug Plan file to show you what percentage of plans cover it and at what tier. For your exact copay, pick "Medicare" above and check your plan's Summary of Benefits, or log in to Medicare.gov.
How long does a Patient Assistance Program take?
Most PAPs take 2-6 weeks from application to first fill. Ask the manufacturer about a "bridge supply" — many will ship 30 days free while your application is being reviewed so you don't go without the drug.
What if I have a high-deductible plan?
For generics, Cost Plus Drugs cash price is often cheaper than your deductible-phase copay. For brand names, the manufacturer copay card almost always wins. A GoodRx coupon can be a last resort for uncovered drugs, but it doesn't count toward your deductible.
Are there charity grants for Dermatitis?
Charities like HealthWell Foundation, PAN Foundation, Good Days, and the National Organization for Rare Disorders provide copay help for specific conditions. Funds often run out mid-year — apply early. We list the specific grants for your condition in the options above.
More about Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70
Full Oxygen/Nitrogen 30/70 drug page
FDA label, prior authorization rules, full indications list
More options for Dermatitis
Drugs, grants, and assistance for this condition
Guide to Patient Assistance Programs
How PAPs work, who qualifies, typical wait times
If your insurance denied coverage
5-level appeal playbook — Medicare has a 60% win rate at Level 3