POLICY BRIEFINGS
Hart Health Strategies provides a comprehensive policy briefing on a weekly basis. This in-depth health policy briefing is sent out at the beginning of each week. The health policy briefing recaps the previous week and previews the week ahead. It alerts clients to upcoming congressional hearings, newly introduced bills, regulatory announcements, and implementation activity related to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA) and other health laws.
THIS WEEK'S BRIEFING - SEPTEMBER 5, 2023
- HHS Selects the First Drugs for Medicare Drug Price Negotiation
- Majority Leader Steve Scalise Undergoing Treatment for Blood Cancer
- White House Calls on Congress to Pass Continuing Resolution
- Doc Caucus Members Ask Appropriators to Act on Abortion Training Programs
- House Budget Panel Launches Health Care Task Force
- NIH Nominee Reaches Agreement with Warren on Ethics Demands
- Warren, Jayapal Urge FDA to Address Orange Book-Related Problems
- New HHS OIG Strategy on Medicare, Medicaid Managed Care
- Department of Labor Proposes to Extend Overtime Protections
- Recently Introduced Health Legislation
HHS Selects the First Drugs for Medicare Drug Price Negotiation
The Biden administration released the list of the first 10 Part D drugs subject to the price negotiation process established by the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act:
- Bristol-Pfizer’s Eliquis, used as a blood thinner;
- Eli Lilly’s Jardiance, used for diabetes and heart failure;
- Johnson & Johnson’s Xarelto, used as a blood thinner;
- Merck’s Januvia, used for diabetes;
- AstraZeneca’s Farxiga, used for diabetes and heart failure;
- Novartis’ Entresto, used for heart failure;
- Amgen’s Enbrel, used for autoimmune diseases;
- AbbVie-J&J’s Imbruvica, used for blood cancers;
- J&J’s Stelara, used for autoimmune diseases; and
- Novo Nordisk’s NovoLog, used for diabetes.

Majority Leader Steve Scalise Undergoing Treatment for Blood Cancer
House Majority Leader Steve Scalise (R-La.) has been diagnosed with multiple myeloma, “a very treatable blood cancer,” according to a statement released last week. Scalise has already begun treatment, which will last several months. He plans to return to Washington when the House of Representatives reconvenes later this month, and announced that he expects to continue his work as Majority Leader during this period.
White House Calls on Congress to Pass Continuing Resolution
The Biden administration formally asked Congress to pass a short-term spending bill to prevent a government shutdown at the end of the fiscal year on September 30. The White House is also seeking $40 billion in emergency spending as a part of the stopgap package. Conservatives in the House Freedom Caucus have already expressed opposition to any clean continuing resolution that does not include the Secure the Border Act, address the “unprecedented weaponization of the Justice Department and FBI,” and “end the Left’s cancerous woke policies in the Pentagon.” Both Democrat and Republican leaders of the Senate have signaled their support for a stopgap spending measure, and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) stated that the Senate’s focus will be on government funding when the chamber returns from August recess this week.
Doc Caucus Members Ask Appropriators to Act on Abortion Training Programs
The GOP Doctors Caucus sent a letter to House Appropriations Labor-Health and Human Services-Education Subcommittee Chairman Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.) in support of a change to physician training requirements that would result in medical residents having to opt-in to learn about abortion services, rather than the current process of allowing them to opt-out of such lessons. Several Doc Caucus members and former practicing OB/GYN Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas) raised concerns that the current opt-out process “is fundamentally unjust and places undue pressure on [residents] to partake in training that may conflict with their beliefs.” The letter encourages appropriators to prohibit federal funds from being used to implement opt-out curricula.
House Budget Panel Launches Health Care Task Force
House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) recently announced the formation of a task force on health care. The task force will focus on bending the cost curve of health care, and will work to examine key drivers of health care costs and proposals to reduce health care spending. Rep. Michael Burgess (R-Texas) will serve as the chair of the task force, whose members include Reps. Drew Ferguson (R-Ga.), Buddy Carter (R-Ga.), Lloyd Smucker (R-Pa.), Blake Moore (R-Utah), and Rudy Yakym (R-Ind.). According to Arrington, the Task Force “will be guided by the principles that health care in America should be affordable, accessible, and personalized.” It plans to explore the Congressional Budget Office’s modeling and projection capabilities of health care policies “to ensure policymakers can access the best data when evaluating potential impacts on the federal budget and patients.” The task force issued a request for information (RFI) seeking comments by October 15 “on solutions to improve outcomes and reduce federal health care spending in the budget.”
NIH Nominee Reaches Agreement with Warren on Ethics Demands
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) will support the confirmation of Monica Bertagnolli to serve as the Director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) after the Biden administration nominee agreed to a pair of ethics demands. Bertagnolli agreed to not seek employment or compensation from any pharmaceutical company with an annual revenue of $10 billion or more for four years after leaving her government post. She also agreed to recuse herself from NIH decisions related to companies with which she has had a prior relationship for four years. The standard recusal period is two years. Bertagnolli’s path to confirmation is still complicated by Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee Chairman Bernie Sander’s (I-Vt.) refusal to schedule a hearing on her nomination. Sanders has pledged to oppose all administration health nominees until the White House takes unilateral action to cut drug prices. The NIH has been without a permanent leader since Dr. Francis Collins stepped down in December 2021.
Warren, Jayapal Urge FDA to Address Orange Book-Related Problems
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) sent a letter to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) urging the agency to close alleged regulatory loopholes which they assert delay the entry of generic competition to the market and enable manufacturers of brand pharmaceuticals to keep high prices in place for longer periods of time. The lawmakers specifically recommend that the FDA narrow the patents allowed to be listed in the Orange Book, which is used by generic drug companies to determine when they can file a generic drug for approval. The letter also calls for increased information sharing between the FDA and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to help determine whether manufacturers are using the patent system in an anti-competitive manner.
New HHS OIG Strategy on Medicare, Medicaid Managed Care
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General (OIG) published a coordinated oversight plan for managed care in the Medicare and Medicaid programs last week. The strategy will be used to align OIG’s audits, evaluations, investigations, and enforcement of managed care. It aims to promote access to care for people enrolled in managed care, provide comprehensive financial oversight, promote data accuracy, and encourage data driven decisions. OIG’s work will be guided by the following managed care life cycle and the unique risks and vulnerabilities associated with each stage: plan establishment and contracting, enrollment, payment, and the provision of services.
September 5, 2023: | Page 1 Page 2
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BRIEFING ARCHIVE
- 2023
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- 9/25/23 VIEW | PRINTABLE PDF
- 9/18/23 VIEW | PRINTABLE PDF
- 9/11/23 VIEW | PRINTABLE PDF
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