Q&A
How one Senate Republican is thinking about health care
I recently sat down with Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) to chat about her positions on health care, as she's a recent addition to the Senate Finance Committee. She's been increasingly active on health care issues, including sponsoring a bill that will regulate the financial relationship between pharmaceutical companies and pharmacy middlemen.
Here are a few key takeaways from our conversation:
- While her bill on PBM fees was included in a recent Finance committee package of PBM reforms, she's still pushing to add a bill she's working on with Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) to expand PBMs' pharmacy networks
- On potentially capping costs for commercially insured patients who use insulin, Blackburn was noncommittal. "I prefer a free market approach. I want to see what they're going to come forward with and then how it's going to affect access in the state," she said.
- Blackburn said she's been concerned about some of the site-neutral pay policies floating around the Hill this Congress, but characterized a House proposal on payments for administering medicines "less harmful" than some alternatives.
cancer moonshot
Moon or bust
The second-stage booster in President Biden's moonshot to halve cancer deaths doesn't have a ton of fuel, at least when it comes to funding from Congress. Biden's updated plan also differs in many ways from the original that kicked off in late 2016, as my colleague John Wilkerson reports this morning.
If lawmakers want to renew funding for the program, there are some questions they might want to answer first, according to nonpartisan congressional researchers.
Among them is whether the new program should focus on researching new drugs or expand out to other areas that include cancer screening, prevention, and equitable treatment. There's also the question of where to house the moonshot program. Historically, the program has been run by the National Institutes of Health, but the Biden administration is placing a lot of emphasis on the new Advance Research Projects Agency for Health. Read more from John.
No comments