Wide-ranging U.S. health bill expected to
sail through House vote
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[November 29, 2016]
By Toni Clarke
(Reuters) - The U.S. House of
Representatives is expected to pass a $6.3 billion piece of legislation
on Wednesday designed to spur medical innovation, speed access to new
drugs, expand mental health treatment, and combat opioid abuse.
The bill, known as the 21st Century Cures Act, provides $4.8 billion to
the National Institutes of Health (NIH) over 10 years to support brain,
cancer and precision medicine research. It also provides $500 million to
the Food and Drug Administration to approve drugs and devices more
quickly.
President-elect Donald Trump has promised to cut "red tape" at the FDA.
He has not commented specifically on 21st Century Cures. The U.S. Senate
is expected to vote on the bill next week. It is expected to pass,
though possibly not before some additional changes are made. It would
then go to President Barack Obama for signature.
The bill calls for $1 billion over two years to treat and prevent opioid
abuse, including improving prescription drug monitoring programs,
training for health care providers, and expanding access to opioid
treatment programs.
Critics of the bill, including Senator Elizabeth Warren of
Massachusetts, a Democrat, said it contains too many give-aways to the
pharmaceutical industry and will allow companies to push treatments with
limited proof of efficacy.
Speaking on the Senate floor on Monday, Warren said she could not vote
for the bill despite its many positive elements and would not be a
"lackey" for the drug industry.
Warren, along with Republican Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa, also
objects to a provision that would allow companies to hide payments to
doctors under the auspices of continuing medical education. Grassley
co-authored the Sunshine Act which led to the creation of a database
listing drug and device company payments to doctors.
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A person holds pharmaceutical tablets and capsules in this picture
illustration taken in Ljubljana September 18, 2013. REUTERS/Srdjan
Zivulovic
"A lot of earlier payments to doctors were under the umbrella of
Continuing Medical Education," Grassley said in a statement on
Monday. "We shouldn't create a loophole that would let drug and
medical device companies mask their payments to doctors under a
payment category that's too broad and could gut the spirit and the
letter of the Sunshine Act."
The bill would add an additional reporting exemption for physicians
who receive indirect payments for speaking fees.
Patients groups hailed the bill, saying it would bring patient
voices to the center of the drug approval process.
"This is a patient-centered bill," said Ellen Sigal, chair and
founder of Friends of Cancer Research, a patient advocacy
organization. "It fosters innovation and doesn't lower safety
standards."
(Reporting by Toni Clarke in Washington; editing by Diane Craft)
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