ACS CAN Legislative Priorities A Primer on our Issues September 22, 2008.
-
Upload
shauna-simon -
Category
Documents
-
view
213 -
download
0
Transcript of ACS CAN Legislative Priorities A Primer on our Issues September 22, 2008.
ACS CAN Legislative Priorities
A Primer on our Issues
September 22, 2008
Who We Are & Why We Are Here
• CATHY CALLAWAY - ACS CAN Senior Specialist, State And Local Campaigns
GREGG HAIFLEY - ACS CAN Associate Director, Federal Relations
• WHY WE ARE HERE: To provide information on the ACS CAN State and Federal Legislative priorities to empower advocates to secure passage of legislation to prevent, screen for, and treat cancer.
Who We Are & Why We Are Here
• JOHN DANIEL - South Atlantic Division, Vice President, Federal & Emerging Issues
• PETER AMES – New England Division, State Director of Government Relations & Advocacy
• WHY WE ARE HERE: To provide information on the ACS CAN State and Federal Legislative priorities to empower advocates to secure passage of legislation to prevent, screen for, and treat cancer.
State Issues
• Colorectal Cancer Screening• Pain & Palliative Care• Breast & Cervical Cancer
Screening• Tobacco Control
Colorectal Cancer Screening
ACS & ACS CAN believe all patients, inconsultation with their doctor, should haveaccess to the full range of colorectalcancer screening tests that are best forthat individual's medical situation, and thatall screening tests should be covered byprivate insurance for employees of all sizecompanies regardless.
Colorectal Cancer Screening
• This year, the American Cancer Society, in conjunction with many other professional medical organizations, released new, updated screening guidelines for colorectal cancer.
• 26 states and the District of Columbia now have cancer screening mandates in effect for private insurance.
• Many states have begun programs to screen for and treat colorectal cancer in uninsured populations.
FLORIDA
MISSISSIPPI
WESTVIRGINIA
2000
RHODE ISLAND 2000
WASHINGTON 2007
OREGON 2005
IDAHO
MONTANA
WYOMING 2001
NORTHDAKOTA
SOUTHDAKOTA
NEBRASKA2007
MINNESOTA 2007
WISCONSIN
ILLINOIS 2003*
INDIANA 2000
OHIO
MISSOURI 1999
COLORADO
UTAH
NEVADA 2003
CALIFORNIA 2000
ARIZONA
NEW MEXICO2007
OKLAHOMA ARKANSAS
2005
KENTUCKY 2008
VIRGINIA 2000
TEXAS2001
MASSACHUSETTS
GEORGIA2002
ALABAMA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINA 2001TENNESSEE
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND2001
NEW JERSEY 2001
NEW YORK** 2004
CONNECTICUT2001
VERMONT 2006
NEW HAMPSHIRE
MAINE 2008
DELAWARE 2000
LOUISIANA 2005
IOWA
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
2002
MICHIGAN
*
ALASKA 2006
HAWAII
Screening law ensures coverage for the full range of tests
Screening law requires insurers to cover some tests, but not the full range or Statewide insurer agreements are in place to cover the full range of tests
Screening law requires insurers to offer coverage, but does not ensure coverageor There are no state requirements for coverage
KANSAS
Sources: Health Policy Tracking Service & Individual state bill tracking services
*In 2003, Illinois expanded its 1998 law to cover the full range**The New York Health Plan Association, which serves 6 million New Yorkers, covers
the full range of colorectal cancer screening tests, as a part of a voluntary collaborative with ACS.
Access to Care-Colorectal Cancer Screening Coverage
Pain and Palliative Care
ACS & ACS CAN believe that the full range of cancer pain relief treatments and medications should be available to allcancer patients and that approved andlegal cancer pain relief medications shouldbe attainable without undue scrutiny orsuspicion cast upon the cancer patientwho may rely on those medications for medical and/or quality of life purposes.
Pain and Palliative Care
• 31 states have a ‘B’ or better on the University of Wisconsin's Pain & Policy Studies Group (PPSG) report card.
• 5 states have achieved an ‘A’ • In September, new model
legislation and policy guidelines regarding state electronic prescription monitoring programs (PMPs) were rolled out to the field.
FLORIDA
MISSISSIPPI
WESTVIRGINIA
RHODE ISLAND
WASHINGTON
OREGON
IDAHO
MONTANA
WYOMING
NORTHDAKOTA
SOUTHDAKOTA
NEBRASKA
IOWA
MINNESOTA
WISCONSIN
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
OHIO
MISSOURI
KANSAS
COLORADO
UTAH
NEVADA
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA NEW MEXICO
OKLAHOMA
ARKANSAS
KENTUCKY
VIRGINIA
TEXAS
MASSACHUSETTS
GEORGIA
ALABAMA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINATENNESSEE
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
CONNECTICUT
VERMONT
NEW HAMPSHIRE
MAINE
DELAWARE
LOUISIANA
WASHINGTON, D.C.
MICHIGAN
*
Cancer Pain Management: 2008 State Policies and Practice
ALASKA
HAWAIIWell balanced policies and good practices that enhance pain management, with opportunities for additional improvements to achieve better pain management Moderately balanced policies and practices; action required to address some policy and practice barriers that impede pain management
*Source: Data from University of Wisconsin’s Pain & Policy Studies Group, Achieving Balance in State Pain Policy: A Progress Report Card (2008). http://www.painpolicy.wisc.edu/Achieving_Balance/index.html
Numerous policy and practice barriers exist that impede pain management and require concerted action to address
FLORIDA
MISSISSIPPI
WESTVIRGINIA
RHODE ISLAND
WASHINGTON
OREGON
IDAHO
MONTANA
WYOMING
NORTHDAKOTA
SOUTHDAKOTA
NEBRASKA
MINNESOTA
WISCONSIN
ILLINOIS*
INDIANAOHIO
MISSOURI
COLORADO
UTAH
NEVADA
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA
NEW MEXICOOKLAHOMA ARKANSAS
KENTUCKY
VIRGINIA
TEXAS
MASSACHUSETTS
GEORGIA
ALABAMA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINA TENNESSEE
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND
NEW JERSEY
NEW YORK
CONNECTICUT
VERMONT
NEW HAMPSHIRE
MAINE
DELAWARE
LOUISIANA
IOWA
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
MICHIGAN
**
ALASKA
HAWAII
State Allocation/CDC award > 100.0%
States do not allocate funding more than the required match
KANSAS
American Cancer SocietyNational Government Relations Department
Policy Updated June 20, 2008
Source: 2007 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and unpublished data collected from NGRD, Divisions, including input form NBCCEDP directors.
* Illinois expanded their program to serve all uninsured women in Illinois in the age group served.
State Allocation/CDC award between 0.01-99.9%
State Appropriations for Breast & Cervical Cancer Screening
Programs
Policy Initiatives to Fight Breast & Cervical Cancer
• Protect the Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act
• Funding the Patient Navigation Program
• Eliminate Medicare co-pays for breast screening services
• Increase access, education and use of the HPV vaccine.
• Ensure quality healthcare is available to all.
Tobacco Control
• Smoking accounts for at least 30% of all cancer deaths and 87% of lung cancer deaths.
• The Solution:» Regular increases in the price of tobacco
products» Fully funding & implementing
comprehensive research-based tobacco control programs according to CDC’s Best Practices
» Passing & implementing smoke-free policies
FLORIDA
MISSISSIPPI
WESTVIRGINIA
RHODE ISLAND $2.46
WASHINGTON
OREGON
IDAHO
MONTANA
WYOMING
NORTHDAKOTA
SOUTHDAKOTA
NEBRASKA
IOWA
MINNESOTA
WISCONSIN
ILLINOIS
INDIANA
OHIO
MISSOURI
KANSAS
COLORADO
UTAH
NEVADA
CALIFORNIA
ARIZONA NEW MEXICO
OKLAHOMA
ARKANSAS
KENTUCKY
VIRGINIA
TEXAS
MASSACHUSETTS $2.51
GEORGIA
ALABAMA
SOUTHCAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINATENNESSEE
PENNSYLVANIA
MARYLAND $2.00
NEW JERSEY $2.575
NEW YORK
CONNECTICUT $2.00
VERMONT $1.99
NEW HAMPSHIRE $1.08
MAINE
DELAWARE $1.15
LOUISIANA
WASHINGTON, D.C. $1.00
MICHIGAN
*
State Cigarette Tax Rates
ALASKA
HAWAII
Equal to or above $1.14 per pack
Between $0.57 and $1.13 per pack
Equal to or below $0.56 per pack
$2.025
$1.18
87¢
$1.80
$2.00
57¢
80¢
$2.00
69.5¢
$1.70
60¢
84¢
91¢
44¢
$1.53
64¢
79¢
$1.03
$1.41
$1.504
$1.36
$1.77
$2.00
17¢
59¢
36¢
18¢
42.5¢
37¢
33.9¢
7¢
62¢35¢
30¢30¢
55¢
98¢ 99.5¢
$1.25
$1.35
$2.75
$2.00
Tobacco Control Funding
• ACS & ACS CAN support funding and implementation of tobacco control programs according to the 2007 CDC Best Practices for Comprehensive Tobacco Control Programs– State & Community Interventions– Health Communications Interventions– Cessation Interventions– Surveillance & Evaluation– Administration & Management
100% Smoke-free Policies
• 65.1% of US population protected by 100% smoke-free workplace and/or restaurant and/or bar law.
• 2,883 municipalities restrict smoking
• 28 states plus DC & Puerto Rico have strong smoke-free laws
• 49.7% of US population resides in a community with a smoke-free workplace law.
• 62.6% with a smoke-free restaurant law
• 50.6% with smoke-free bar law• 34.7% have 100% smoke-free
workplaces & restaurants & bars.
Percent of US Population Protected
FEDERAL ISSUES
• GRANTING FDA THE AUTHORITY TO REGULATE THE PRODUCTION AND MARKETING OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS
FEDERAL ISSUES
• INCREASING FUNDING FOR RESEARCH FOR CANCER PREVENTION AND EARLY DETECTION, AND TREATMENT
FEDERAL ISSUES
• ESTABLISH A CDC COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING AND TREATMENT PROGRAM AND INCREASE FUNDING OF THE CDC NATIONAL BREAST AND CERVICAL CANCER EARLY DETECTION PROGRAM (NBCCEDP)
FDA REGULATION OF PRODUCTION AND MARKETING OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS
HR 1108/S 625
• Stops aggressive tobacco company marketing to children – curbs youth access to tobacco products
• Requires unmistakable health warnings on packages
• Requires tobacco companies to disclose the content of their products
FDA REGULATION OF PRODUCTION AND MARKETING OF TOBACCO PRODUCTS
HR 1108/S 625
• Allows FDA to order changes in tobacco products.
• Stops the tobacco industry from making false and misleading claims about their products.
• Gives states and local governments authority to regulate tobacco marketing within their jurisdictions.
WHAT THE FDA BILL DOES NOT DO
• Does not overtax the resources and capability of the FDA
• Does not mislead the public into thinking that the FDA has found tobacco products to be safe to consume
• Does not assert any new authority over tobacco farms or tobacco growers
• Does not add to the annual federal deficit or to the national debt
THE BUDGET AND THE NATIONAL CANCER FUND
• Cancer research and prevention funding has not kept pace with inflation and increased needs.
• Since FY 2003, when accounting for inflation, the NCI’s budget has decreased by more than $630 million (13.7 percent).
• Since FY 2003, CDC’s cancer budget has shrunk by nearly $14 million (5 percent)
• In FY 2007, NCI funded 300 fewer new research project grants than just three years ago.
WHY FUNDING MUST INCREASE
• Research is providing breakthroughs in prevention and early detection, and new treatments for the deadliest cancers.
• But the budgets for NCI and CDC cancer programs are falling below where they need to be.
• Fewer clinical trials have been started and fewer patients are being enrolled than five years ago.
WHY FUNDING MUST INCREASE
• The development of new drugs, devices, and other tools for treating cancer is being delayed.
• CDC’s National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program served 44,000 fewer women in 2006 than in 2005 – a decline of 7.5 percent.
• CDC’s colorectal cancer screening initiative is under-funded and unable to increase public awareness about the need for colorectal screening. Full funding of the national colorectal screening and treatment program would cost approximately $525 million a year and would save more than 30,00 lives.
THE FUNDING WE NEED – FY 2009
• National Institutes of Health - $30.81 billion ($1.88 billion (6.5 percent) over FY 2008)
• National Cancer Institute - $5.26 billion ($455 million (9.5 percent) over FY 2008)
• Centers for Disease Control Cancer Programs - ($136 million over FY 2008)
WE WON’T ACCEPT EXCUSES
• Appropriations bills aren’t going anywhere this year ….
• Response: The funding bills will have to be passed at some point (early next year if not late this year) – will you support our funding increase request?
WE WON’T ACCEPT EXCUSES
• We just doubled NIH’s budget ….
• Response: If you take inflation into account, the funding is down
WE WON’T ACCEPT EXCUSES
• NIH needs to do a better job managing its money ….
• Response: Nearly 80 percent of the NCI portion of NIH funding goes out the door to support research at more than 650 universities, hospitals, cancer centers, and other sites across the country. Research leads to breakthroughs in screening and treatments and often leads to clinical trials that directly benefit cancer patients.
WE WON’T ACCEPT EXCUSES
• Wasn’t there just a big fundraiser for cancer?
• Response: Stand Up To Cancer generated about $100 million in pledged donations for cancer research – a good thing but not enough to meet our research needs.
THE NATIONAL CANCER FUND - HR 6791
• Provide a dedicated source of funding to supplement existing appropriations of funds for combating cancer.
• Increased, sustainable and predictable funding would allow for long-term planning and support for cancer research, early detection, and screening projects.
• Dedicated, sensible, sustainable, well supported funding.
BENEFITS OF A NATIONAL CANCER FUND
• Expanded access to health care for underserved and underinsured.
• New research to discover prevention and early detection tools for the most deadly cancers, including, but not limited to, pancreatic, ovarian, and lung cancers.
BENEFITS OF A NATIONAL CANCER FUND
• Expanded breast and cervical cancer early detection and treatment programs to cover screening and treatment for women who do not have access to health care.
• Expanded colorectal cancer early detection and treatment programs to cover men and women who do not otherwise have access to health care.
BENEFITS OF A NATIONAL CANCER FUND
• Increased number of qualified NIH research grants.
• Increased access to federally sponsored clinical trials.
ESTABLISH A CDC COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING AND TREATMENT
PROGRAM
• Colorectal cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death in men and women in the United States.
• Yet, colorectal cancer can be prevented in many cases through the early identification and removal of pre-cancerous polyps, detectable only through colorectal cancer screenings.
ESTABLISH A CDC COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING AND TREATMENT
PROGRAM
• Of the 49,960 people expected to die of colorectal cancer in 2008, 50-80% could be saved if they were tested.
• The uninsured and underinsured
are at particular risk of being diagnosed with later-stage colorectal cancer. Over 80 percent of uninsured adults between the ages of 50 and 64 have not been screened for colorectal cancer.
ESTABLISH A CDC COLORECTAL CANCER SCREENING AND TREATMENT
PROGRAM
• H.R. 1738 establishes a program at the CDC to provide screenings and treatment for colorectal cancer for low-income, uninsured and underinsured.
• The Senate Labor/HHS appropriations bill includes $25 million for CDC to spend through pilot sites to do colorectal cancer screening – this would allow CDC to expand its current colorectal cancer screening efforts.
INCREASE FUNDING OF NATIONAL BREAST AND CERVICAL CANCER EARLY
DETECTION PROGRAM (NBCCEDP)
• The NBCCEDP provides low-income, uninsured and underinsured women access to breast and cervical cancer screening tests, follow-up services and access to treatment.
• Since its inception in 1991, the NBCCEDP has provided more than 7.5 million screening tests to more than 3.1 million women and diagnosed more than 33,000 breast cancers, 2,000 cervical cancers and 88,000 pre-cancerous cervical lesions.
INCREASE FUNDING OF NATIONAL BREAST AND CERVICAL CANCER EARLY
DETECTION PROGRAM (NBCCEDP)
• However, NBCCEDP served 44,000 fewer women in 2006 than in 2005 – a decline of 7.5 percent.
• Fulfill the promise of the NBCCEDP Reauthorization Act of 2007 by accelerating an increase in resources for the program to $250 million, which would allow at least an additional 130,000 women to be served.
Thank you!
• Thank you for your advocacy.
• Together we will make a difference.
• Success will mean reducing the incidence of cancer, increasing screening, expanding research, securing treatment, and saving lives.