Overnight Health Care: Rep. Debbie Dingell on the pain and tragedy of the opioids crisis | DEA moves to curb opioid oversupply | Dem says Trump pick opposes VA privatization
Good evening, and welcome to Overnight Health Care. It’s only Tuesday, but tomorrow is the last day of votes in the House for the week. We’re jealous it’s House lawmakers’ Friday.
Keep reading for one Dem lawmaker’s personal connection to the opioid crisis, details on a flurry of bills to deal with the epidemic and how President Trump’s pick to lead the VA is making the Senate rounds.
The second of The Hill’s Close to Home series on opioids, presented by Partnership for Safe Medicines, took a deep dive into Rep. Debbie Dingell’s personal connection to the opioid epidemic.
The Michigan Democrat has seen what prescription painkillers can do. Both her father and sister misused opioids. Her sister died in 2005 from an overdose after cycling in and out of drug treatment centers. Sometimes, Dingell would call morgues when her family couldn’t find Mary Grace, hoping she wasn’t there.
But Dingell also knows that the drugs can help.
Her husband, 91-year-old John Dingell — the longest-serving member in Congress’s history — needs opioids to ease his chronic pain.
Key quote: “I try to tell people how complicated [the opioid epidemic] is,” she said.
“We’ve got to be balanced, we’ve got to not make people with legitimate needs feel criminalized. We’ve got to keep kids from starting to begin with,” she said of the nation’s challenges when it comes to opioids.
Perspective: As state lawmakers and the health industry work to clamp down on opioid abuse, they’ve begun placing controversial limits on the opioids doctors can prescribe.
Dingell says lawmakers must enact policies that help stem the tide of the epidemic, while remaining mindful that some patients in pain need access to opioids.
In case you’re having trouble keeping track of all the opioid bills introduced, we’ve got you covered. Here’s your roundup of bills introduced today:
- Bernie Sanders is talking tough on opioid manufacturers. Sanders unveiled legislation targeting drug companies over their role in the opioid crisis. The bill bans companies from marketing opioids to consumers as nonaddictive, and fines them 25 percent of profits from opioid products if they are found in violation. It would also make top pharma executives criminally liable if their companies are found to be responsible for the opioid epidemic.
- Senate Health Committee is moving its opioid bill through the legislative process. The panel’s leaders formally introduced the bipartisan bill Tuesday after lawmakers reviewed a discussion draft during a legislative hearing last week. Next up: A mark up next week.
- Three senators want to ensure recovery homes have more oversight and guidance. Sens. Tim Kaine (D-Va.), Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) and Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) introduced legislation authorizing the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration (SAMHSA) to develop best practices and provide assistance to states after some sober homes were found to have unscrupulous actors.
More opioid news:
Some communities, consisting of just thousands of people, have been flooded with millions of pills.
But a new proposed rule from the Drug Enforcement Administration aims to help reduce the oversupply of opioids in an effort to curb the number of painkillers sold illegally.
Specifically, the agency is proposing a rule that would change how it sets limits on the amount of opioids drug companies can make every year.
Key quote: “Under this proposed new rule, if DEA believes that a company’s opioids are being diverted for misuse, then they will reduce the amount of opioids that company can make,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said Tuesday during remarks he gave on the opioid crisis in North Carolina.
Context: West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey (R) says the proposed rule is the result of a lawsuit he filed against the DEA seeking more transparency and input in the process the agency uses to determine how many opioids can be produced each year.
The lawsuit was placed on hold in March after Sessions asked the DEA to evaluate its policies on crafting production quotas for opioids.
Read more here.
Trump’s VA pick says he doesn’t support privatization efforts. But he hasn’t told Trump that. Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) the ranking Democrat on the Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee, said Ronny Jackson pledged during a one-on-one meeting that he is against privatization.
Jackson is making courtesy visits to Democratic and Republican senators this week in a goodwill tour ahead of his April 25 committee hearing.
Why the promise is important: Trump’s decision to oust former VA Secretary David Shulkin late last month and replace him with Jackson stoked speculation that the White House wants to allow veterans more access to private-sector health-care providers. The VA has denied it, but Democrats don’t trust the administration, and could gum up Jackson’s confirmation process.
Context: Tester said he has other concerns, and noted Jackson has yet to tell President Trump that he opposes privatization. Jackson “said all the right things,” but the vetting process is just getting started, Tester said.
First endorsement from a new drug pricing group
Patients for Affordable Drugs NOW, a new drug pricing group trying to counterbalance drug companies’ campaign spending, made its first campaign endorsement on Tuesday, of Rep. David McKinley (R-W.Va.).
“McKinley earned the support of patients thanks to his leadership on legislation that would lower drug prices, his independence from Big Pharma, and his work to protect rural hospitals from paying more for prescriptions for low-income West Virginians,” the group said in a press release.
Look for more endorsements: The group plans to endorse more lawmakers in both parties. It is spending six figures on McKinley and plans to spend seven figures overall.
Tuesday roundup:
- 113 health organizations, in a letter to House and Senate leadership, argue the Trump administration should withdraw a proposed rule that would expand access to short-term health plans “until it adequately protects patients and consumers.” Such plans would harm patients with serious, acute and chronic diseases and disabilities, they argue.
- GOP New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu initially resisted a visit to his state from President Trump last month over the country’s opioid addiction crisis, telling the White House that he didn’t want his state used as a prop for the administration, according to a report from CBS. “The president cannot come to New Hampshire without a plan that has substance,” Sununu reportedly told the White House. “You can’t come here with an empty bag and use the state as a prop,” a source added, paraphrasing the governor.
- Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar is postponing a planned appearance before a Senate committee on Thursday as he recovers from an intestinal condition, an HHS official said Tuesday. The official said Azar, who was hospitalized overnight on Sunday before being released, has had his first bout of diverticulitis, an infection of pouches in the colon that can be painful.
What we’re reading
Nursing homes routinely refuse people on addiction treatment (Stat)
Why deep-brain stimulation for depression didn’t pass clinical trials (The Atlantic)
Congressional advisers urge Medicare payments to many stand-alone ERs be cut (Kaiser Health News)
State by state
California insurer faces whistleblower complaint over health law taxes (California Healthline)
Nebraska doesn’t extend Medicaid benefits to elderly nuns (AP)
Pennsylvania House OKs work mandate for ‘able-bodied’ Medicaid recipients (AP)
From The Hill’s Opinion page:
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed..