marching in
Bertagnolli’s burgeoning NIH agenda
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Monica Bertagnolli is just two months into directing the $48 billion NIH, but she has a laundry list of challenges ahead of her. The agency is staring down potential budget cuts, ongoing interrogations of its infectious disease work, and a balancing act with advocates pressing for price controls on federally-funded drugs.
The veteran oncologist and former NCI director sat down with STAT in a far-ranging interview to discuss her priorities and those battles ahead. Bertagnolli said she welcomes the scrutiny of controversial infectious disease studies and questions about whether the agency has made any progress on long Covid, but also defended NIAID’s work amid ratcheting Republican demands for better oversight and even bans on gain-of-function research.
Tellingly, she also held back on a full-throated endorsement of Biden’s latest plan to rein in drug costs, which would invoke NIH to require reasonable prices drugs based on federally funded research and even license those drugs patents to competitors when pharmaceutical companies won’t play ball. Read her comments on drug pricing and more here.
at the capitol
Hill health talks are clear as mud
As Congress hurtles toward another government funding deadline, conversations between the House and Senate over a package to fund important health programs and other add-ons providers want haven’t reached a conclusion. Of course, if there’s another short-term stopgap like congressional leaders are pushing, negotiators will have a little more time.
When asked whether the House and Senate are talking to each other about Medicare provider payment policies, House Ways & Means Committee Chair Jason Smith told STAT in the hallway, “We have been, yes, for weeks.”
Hospital lobbyists went into a bit of a panic last week that they might not be able to avert cuts to safety-net hospital funding (known as DSH cuts in jargon) — so much that the American Hospital Association even sent a strongly worded letter to congressional leaders. But it’s clearer, two lobbyists said, that averting those cuts is a priority for Senate Democrats, including Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, Rachel reports.
The fate of a Medicare payment boost for doctors is less clear, however, according to my colleague John Wilkerson. Congress temporarily hiked doctor pay during the pandemic, and that bonus ended Jan. 1. Doctor groups are lobbying to extend the pay increase, which they call the “doc fix.” (Yes, that again.) Stay tuned this week for more from all three of us.
health advocacy
Arnolds’ spending goes dark
Laura and John Arnold are working hard to overhaul health policy and health research in Washington and in states around the country. And, until now, they had distinguished themselves by displaying exceptional transparency into the money the not-for-profit arms of their organization doles out, by publishing a sortable, up-to-date list of the grants they’ve distributed.
That era is over. Arnold Ventures has removed the database from its website, my co-author Rachel reports. Spokesperson David Hebert said the organization is “making improvements to our website to ensure it’s working as a resource for grantees, prospective grantees, and other website visitors,” and said the change is permanent.
Hebert said the grant information will be available in Arnold Ventures’ not-for-profit tax filings, an industry standard practice that will mean the disclosures will be delayed by two years. The move isn’t entirely surprising, as five years ago the couple converted their venture into a for-profit LLC — a harbinger of the possibility that the standard of transparency may not last forever.