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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Jul 2 2018

Full Issue

Recent Ethical Controversies At NIH Draw Congressional Attention

The House Appropriations Committee has included more transparency requirements for both NIH and the CDC Foundation in their annual reports. Meanwhile, in a report to Congress, the FDA suggested that the ability to offer higher salaries to their employees be expanded.

Stat: Congress Presses For Transparency At Groups Supporting NIH, CDC

The National Institutes of Health has hit a series of ethical snags in recent years, with questions about whether work funded by nonprofit groups has come with too many conditions attached or otherwise failed to meet certain ethical standards. Congress has taken notice. In what amounts to a written warning from Capitol Hill, a House committee last week included language in a spending agreement that emphasizes existing requirements on funding from the Foundation for the NIH and the CDC Foundation. (Facher, 7/2)

Stat: FDA Hints It Wants Flexility From Congress To Pay More Staff Higher Salaries

 In a recent report to Congress, the Food and Drug Administration expressed gratitude for a 2016 law that enabled the agency to pay some staff higher salaries and hire them more quickly. It has also intimated that it would be useful for Congress to expand those powers to more staff in the future. The FDA has long faced challenges hiring staff, due in part to bureaucratic hangups, and in part due to the fact that the agency is competing with the private sector, which can afford to pay employees more. (Swetlitz, 7/2)

And in other news out of the agencies —

The Associated Press: Health Official Who Urged Abstinence Says Views Have Changed

The head of the nation's top public health agency once opposed condoms and needle exchange programs as ways to stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. This week, in one of his first media interviews since taking office, Dr. Robert Redfield Jr. said his views have changed. "I think the data is just clear that these strategies work. When you see evidence that these strategies work, you need to embrace them," said Redfield, director of the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (Stobbe, 6/29)

Politico: Meet The HHS Officials Who Tweet Like Trump

One staffer publicly mocked senators who criticized Donald Trump as “clueless” and “crazy.” Another accused Hillary Clinton of having a campaign aide killed and employing pedophiles. A third wrote the “shameful” press was trying to deny Trump his victories. These are not faceless trolls but midlevel political appointees at the Health and Human Services Department who have helped shape the agency’s communications strategy — even while taking a page out of President Donald Trump’s playbook. (Diamond, 6/29)

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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