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Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Thursday, Oct 3 2019

Full Issue

Drug Pricing Caught In Political Sniping Between Trump, Pelosi

A weekly round-up of stories related to pharmaceutical development and pricing.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi聽and President Donald Trump engaged in a real-time messaging war Wednesday as the president live-tweeted his responses to the California Democrat鈥檚 weekly press conference. Pelosi, who announced last week the House was conducting an 鈥渙fficial鈥 impeachment inquiry into Trump, opened the press conference by talking about legislation Democrats are crafting to address prescription drug prices. She said she hoped Trump聽would want to work on that despite the White House threatening to shut down the legislative process because of the impeachment inquiry. 鈥淚 hope he doesn鈥檛 mean he doesn鈥檛 want to work together to lower the cost of prescription drugs,鈥 she said.聽 (McPherson, 10/2)

Lawmakers who trekked to Rochester and the Mayo Clinic on Wednesday heard about skyrocketing prescription drug prices and offered assurances that stemming the rise will continue to be a top priority at the Capitol next year. Many of the lawmakers had boarded a coach bus at the Capitol in the morning, bound for the first legislative 鈥渕ini-session鈥 in more than two decades. The House-only event involves three days of hearings on topics from drug affordability to wastewater treatment to child-care shortages. (Van Berkel, 10/2)

Traditionally, Golden Tickets lead to chocolate rivers or everlasting gobstoppers. For biotech startups, though, Golden Tickets lead to something with (potentially) fewer pitfalls: money from major pharmaceutical companies.聽On Thursday, Pfizer (PFE) announced it would give two startups, Neutrolis and Mediar Therapeutics, so-called Golden Tickets to LabCentral, a noted Cambridge, Mass., biotech incubator. (Sheridan, 10/2)

In a boost for the pharmaceutical industry, a federal judge dismissed a pair of lawsuits that alleged two large drug makers devised schemes in which nurses were used illegally to promote their medicines and boost prescriptions, an arrangement that purportedly violated federal kickback laws. The ruling is also a win for the federal government as it attempts to implement a new policy for dismissing whistleblower lawsuits when declining to intervene, or join the case. A Department of Justice memo聽issued last year directed its attorneys to consider moving to dismiss lawsuits if they appear deficient or following an investigation of claims made by the whistleblower. (Silverman, 10/2)

With brain cancers, 鈥渘ormally chemotherapy gets in a little but not a lot,鈥 said Dr. Graeme F. Woodworth, a neurosurgeon in the University of Maryland School of Medicine who is testing the method on Miller and 14 other people. "In the future, we鈥檙e hoping we can provide our drugs of choice a way to get in. We鈥檙e hoping we can use it for lots of things.鈥 ...Radiation and chemotherapy are commonly used to slow new cancer growth, but usually aren鈥檛 effective for long with these brain cancers. Federal figures show the median survival is 15 to 18 months. About 15% of patients survive five years. (Cohn, 10/2)

Hospitals and health insurers may not see eye to eye on a lot, but they do agree that the federal government's proposal to make hospitals publicly post payer-negotiated rates for medical services would be bad for business and patients. In comments on the hospital outpatient prospective payment proposed rule, which were due Friday, they urged the CMS to abandon the plan. (Livingston, 9/30)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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