[Ip-health] Cleveand Plain Dealer: Kucinich Wants Govt to Oversee Drug Research

Mike Palmedo mpalmedo@cptech.org
Wed Sep 29 12:37:20 2004


http://www.cleveland.com/news/plaindealer/index.ssf?/base/news/109645024237250.xml

Kucinich wants government to oversee drug research

Wednesday, September 29, 2004
Susan Jaffe
Plain Dealer Reporter

U.S. Rep. Dennis Kucinich proposed a new federal law Wednesday that
would allow the government to take over private drug research and
eliminate drug companies' monopoly on high-priced, brand-name drugs.

Kucinich unveiled the idea at his Lakewood office Wednesday before
flying to Washington, D.C., where he and six co-sponsors introduced the
legislation in the U.S. House.

His "Free Market Drug Act" would create a federal Institute for
Biomedical Research and Development within the National Institutes of
Health that would oversee pharmaceutical research by government labs,
and universities and private companies working under government contracts.

Their research would be public, and the formulas they develop for new
drugs would be available to any manufacturer approved by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration to make them.

That's the way most generic drugs are marketed, with several companies
manufacturing similar generic medicines and competing for sales.

"Competition lowers the price," said Doug Gordon, a Kucinich spokesman.

The $20 billion Kucinich said is needed to support the drug research
would come from the money the government will save when drug prices
plummet. The Medicaid program could save about $15 billion annually and
the new Medicare drug plan could save an estimated $60 billion a year,
according to the plan.

It's no surprise the drug industry doesn't think much of the
congressman's proposal.

"The U.S. pharmaceutical and biotechnology research industry spends in
excess of $30 billion a year to research and develop new medicines,"
said Jeff Trewhitt, a spokesman for the Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America. "We have a system that works, and we should
keep it."

Drug makers have said that high research costs are a key factor in high
drug prices. A recent Families USA survey reported that prices for the
leading brand-name drugs rose an average 22 percent in the past three years.