Health
secretary nominee indicates support for Medicaid
overhaul
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[January 10, 2018] By
Yasmeen Abutaleb
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Alex Azar, a former
drug industry executive and lobbyist nominated to run the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, indicated on Tuesday he
supported a Republican bid to overhaul Medicaid and again vowed to
tackle high drug prices.
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Azar appeared before the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday, which
will ultimately decide whether to move his nomination forward. Azar
also vowed to uphold Obamacare as long as it remained the law but
said that the program needed changes.
"I believe I have a very important obligation to make the program
work as well as possible," Azar said during the wide-ranging hearing
that lasted more than two hours. "What we have now is not working
for people."
Republicans have been trying to dismantle the 2010 Affordable Care
Act, former President Barack Obama's signature domestic policy
achievement. Repealing and replacing Obamacare was one of President
Donald Trump's most frequently repeated campaign promises but
Congress has repeatedly tried and failed to do so.
Azar said he favored elements of a Republican Senate Obamacare
repeal bill that failed to garner enough support last year, which
would have fundamentally restructured Medicaid, the government
insurance program for the poor and disabled.
The doomed measure proposed repealing enhanced federal funding for
Medicaid under Obamacare and instead providing block grants to
states based on the number of enrollees in each state. The block
grants, coupled with the repeal of Medicaid expansion, would slash
funding to the 31 states that expanded the government program under
Obamacare.
Azar said he supported that element of the legislation because it
would provide states more flexibility in deciding how to run their
Medicaid programs. Some Republican lawmakers have floated the idea
of taking on Medicaid reform as a legislative priority this year.
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Azar spent about a decade at Eli Lilly & Co, including five years as
president of its U.S. unit. Democrats on Tuesday pointed to a
handful of Lilly drugs whose prices more than doubled under Azar's
watch and fiercely questioned how seriously he would work to make
prescription drugs more affordable.
During the questioning, Azar did not dismiss the possibility of
allowing Medicare, the government health program for the elderly, to
negotiate drug prices, a favored proposal among Democrats.
Azar vowed to work with Republicans and Democrats on his four top
priorities: drug pricing, making healthcare more affordable and
helping people who cannot purchase insurance on the Obamacare
market, Medicare reform and the opioid epidemic.
Senator Ron Wyden, the top-ranking Democrat on the committee, said
Azar's promise to work on a bipartisan basis was a welcome change
from the previous health secretary, Tom Price, who Wyden said did
not work with Democrats.
Price, a former U.S. Republican Representative, resigned in
September amid a furor over his use of expensive taxpayer-funded
private charter jets for government travel.
(Reporting by Yasmeen Abutaleb; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)
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