Search This Blog

Sunday, July 31, 2022

Schumer-Manchin deal injects ‘incredible amount of uncertainty into economy’: Cassidy

 Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) on Sunday knocked the Inflation Reduction Act championed by Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and centrist swing vote Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.), saying the bill could lead to a recession despite its sponsors’ claims that it will tamp down rising prices.

“It may be disinflationary by causing a recession. They’re interjecting an incredible amount of uncertainty into the economy just as we entered a recession,” Cassidy told Jonathan Karl on ABC’s “This Week.”

The measure is a scaled-down version of the Build Back Better Act that Manchin stymied last year.

The $670 billion reconciliation bill announced last week would invest in domestic energy, lower prescription drug costs, combat climate change and reduce the deficit by closing tax loopholes on wealthy individuals and corporations. 

“Much of what he says about this bill is just not true,” Cassidy said Sunday of Manchin’s comments earlier on the ABC program when the West Virginia Democrat defended his support of a climate and tax deal against claims that the measure could increase inflation over a year and a half.

Cassidy instead argued that the bill would raise taxes and lead to higher costs for consumers.

“I think what we’re doing is inducing [manufacturers] to move to Asia. You can have a disinflationary program by causing a recession. I think this is going to lead to a worse recession.”

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/3581545-cassidy-says-schumer-manchin-deal-injects-incredible-amount-of-uncertainty-into-to-the-economy/

12 states with BA.2.75 cases

 A dozen states have reported cases of the newest omicron subvariant BA.2.75 as of July 29, early disease surveillance data shows. 

The subvariant has numerous mutations that may make it more adept than BA. 5, the nation's dominant strain, at spreading quickly and evading immune protection. While it's still unclear whether BA.2.75 will compete against BA.5 or cause more severe illness, some experts contend the subvariant is not the next big one to fret over.

Below is a breakdown of U.S. states reporting BA.2.75 cases, based on a dashboard run by Raj Rajnarayanan, PhD, assistant dean of research and associate professor in the department of basic sciences at the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro. The dashboard uses data from GISAID, a global data-sharing platform for viruses.

California — 10

Washington — 9

Illinois — 4

Virginia — 3

North Carolina — 3 

Wisconsin — 2

New York — 2

Texas — 1

Nebraska — 1 

Iowa — 1

Delaware — 1

Arizona — 1

https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/public-health/12-states-with-ba-2-75-cases.html

Banana Boat sunscreen recalled due to cancer-causing chemical

 Banana Boat is recalling three batches of its “hair and scalp” sunscreen after tests found that the product contains trace amounts of cancer-causing chemical benzene, the manufacturer said in an announcement submitted to the Federal Drug Administration.

Exposure to benzene through skin contact, inhalation and by mouth has been linked to cancer such as leukemia, Fox Business reported.

The Shelton, Connecticut-based company claimed in the Friday release that it “has not received any adverse events related to this recall” and that “daily exposure to benzene in the recalled products would not be expected to cause adverse health consequences.”

The recalled products have expiration dates of December 2022, February 2023 and April 2024, the company said. Banana Boat said it will also offer reimbursement to consumers who bought the recalled products.

Banana Boat Hair and Scalp Sunscreen recall
The FDA assured that the levels found in the defective sunscreen “would not be expected to cause adverse heath consequences.” 
Edgewell Personal Care/FDA

No other batches made before or after those expiration dates listed were affected, according to the FDA release, and no other Banana Boat sunscreen is subject to the recall. 

The FDA recommends that buyers of Banana Boat’s Hair and Scalp sunscreen should “stop using the affected product immediately and appropriately discard.”

Consumers with questions regarding the recall can contact Edgewell Personal Care at 1-888-686-3988 or visit www.bananaboat.com for more information. Banana Boat also announced that they are offering reimbursement for consumers who have purchased a product marked with one of the lot of codes, which is on the bottom of the cans. 

https://nypost.com/2022/07/30/banana-boat-sunscreen-recalled-due-to-cancer-causing-chemical/

'VA looking at abortion care options in states with new restrictions'

 Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis McDonough on Sunday said his department is examining how to best protect abortion access to veterans after the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade, but he declined to provide a specific path forward.

CNN “State of the Union” co-anchor Jake Tapper asked McDonough to respond to a letter from 24 Senate Democrats calling on the department to allow abortion services at veteran hospitals.

“We’re going to make sure that they have access to the full slate of that care, because that’s what we owe them,” McDonough said.

The letter, led by Sens. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Mazie Hirono (D-Hawaii), argues that the VA has statutory authority to provide abortions. The senators said the department should immediately begin a rulemaking process to change current regulations, which prevent it from providing abortions and abortion counseling as part of its medical benefits package.

When asked on Sunday if the VA would pay for veterans living in states with abortion restrictions to fly to areas where they can receive an abortion, McDonough declined to say.

“We’re looking expressly at these questions about how we guarantee the life and the health of our veterans, our women veterans, those 300,000 who rely on us for their care,” McDonough said. 

“I don’t have any announcements to make on that this morning, Jake, but we’re looking very closely at that to ensure that there’s no diminution and no reduction of services to them,” he added.

The Supreme Court’s decision last month overturning the constitutional right to abortion has set off a flurry of so-called trigger laws and other bills in state legislatures that restrict abortion access, also fueling intense fury among Democrats.

“My preference is that they not face risk to their lives as a result of this decision from the court,” McDonough said on CNN “We’re going to make sure that we’re in a position to take care of them.”

https://thehill.com/homenews/sunday-talk-shows/3581503-mcdonough-says-va-looking-at-abortion-care-options-in-states-with-new-restrictions/

WTO: Don’t make bad situation worse with IP waivers for Covid meds, diagnostics

 The World Trade Organization recently agreed to suspend patent protections for Covid-19 vaccines. The trade body is now considering going one step further: extending the intellectual property waiver to Covid-19 therapeutics and diagnostics. That misguided idea would have disastrous consequences: further eroding intellectual property protections will discourage research and development and make it even harder to fight deadly diseases and future pandemics.

South Africa and India first proposed an intellectual property waiver nearly two years ago. They claimed that suspending patents would allow manufacturers in developing countries to produce generic versions of vaccines and therapeutics without paying royalties to the companies that developed them, which was necessary to curb the pandemic and vaccinate people around the world.

Even then the argument was a stretch. But now, at a time when the global vaccine market is glutted and drug companies have formed countless voluntary partnerships with manufacturers in developing countries, the original logic behind the waiver has proven patently false.

Consider Aspen, a South African manufacturer that inked a licensing deal to produce Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine late last year. As of mid-May, after two months of production, Aspen hadn’t received a single order for its version of the J&J shot. Other manufacturers are reporting similar stories. The Serum Institute of India, the world’s largest vaccine manufacturer, halted production of Covid-19 vaccines in April after accumulating 200 million unused shots. Hundreds of millions of the country’s excess doses are expected to expire in September.

Simply put, vaccine supply isn’t the problem. The true barriers to global vaccination have been, and remain, vaccine hesitancy, logistical problems, and trade barriers. No number of doses or licensing deals — either voluntary or coerced — can overcome those administrative and cultural hurdles.

That hasn’t stopped WTO members from latching onto the erroneous idea that patents are the culprit for lagging global vaccination efforts and the prolonged fight against Covid-19. The recently-agreed-upon vaccine waiver resulted from months of closed-door negotiations between South Africa, India, the EU, and the United States.

The WTO has pledged to consider expanding the waiver to Covid-19 therapeutics within six months — despite the fact that the manufacturers of those therapeutics, like vaccine manufacturers, have already made voluntary agreements to help get the medications to those who need them across the globe.

In May 2020, Gilead Sciences established a voluntary licensing program for remdesivir, an antiviral initially developed for hepatitis and Ebola that proved somewhat effective against Covid-19. The company reported in April 2021 that more than 2.3 million people in more than 60 low- and middle-income countries had access to the drug because of its licensing agreements with generics manufacturers.

In October 2021, Merck agreed to a deal with the United Nations’ Medicines Patent Pool that allows manufacturers in more than 100 countries to make molnupiravir, its Covid-19 antiviral medication. A few weeks later, Pfizer made a similar agreement with the UN organization for Paxlovid, its antiviral pill. As of March, 35 generics companies had signed up to begin manufacturing Pfizer’s pill.

In other words, patents aren’t preventing generics manufacturers in low-income countries from licensing and producing Covid-19 therapies, so waiving patent protections wouldn’t increase the availability of those drugs. It would simply force companies like Gilead, Merck, and Pfizer to give up their intellectual property without earning any royalties from it.

That would set a dangerous precedent, one that could have disastrous long-term consequences for future innovation — and people who are hoping for better treatments and cures.

It takes roughly $2 billion to bring a drug to market. Exclusive patent rights give biotech investors confidence that they’ll be able to generate adequate returns if they’re lucky enough to get their experimental medicines through the regulatory approval process and onto pharmacy shelves.

Knowing that the WTO could invalidate those patent protections would cause investors to hesitate backing the next groundbreaking treatments, both for Covid-19 and other future health crises.

That will make the development of drugs like Paxlovid — which reduces risk of Covid-19 hospitalization or death by 51% — increasingly unlikely. It will make it harder for companies like Gilead to ramp up manufacturing and delivery of stockpiled drugs to combat new threats. And it will cause drugmakers to think twice before researching and developing treatments for deadly diseases ranging from cancer to Alzheimer’s.

Anyone looking for future cures can only hope the WTO declines to further weaken protection for intellectual property.

Kenneth E. Thorpe is a professor of health policy at Emory University, chairman of the Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease, and former Deputy Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

https://www.statnews.com/2022/07/31/wto-dont-make-a-bad-situation-worse-by-granting-intellectual-property-waivers-for-covid-19-therapeutics-and-diagnostics/

Dems destroying our economy, one sector at a time

 The Biden administration and its co-conspirators, congressional Democrats, have been busy wrecking America these last 18 months. 

They launched a war on American energy, shutting down the Keystone pipeline and blocking domestic oil and gas exploration — resulting in skyrocketing gas prices, less fuel to heat and cool homes and businesses, and the sorry spectacle of an American president going gas-can-in-hand to beg foreign despots and dictators to supply us with some energy.

They launched a war on our sovereignty and national security by inviting illegal immigrants (and smugglers) to “come on in.” Through our open borders has come a tidal wave of Fentanyl and other illegal drugs now killing Americans all over the country.

They launched a war on education — keeping schools closed while children suffered mentally and emotionally.

And they launched a war on our Constitution, using executive orders to expand a regulatory state that threatens to suffocate individual autonomy and business innovation. Their legislation-through-regulation schemes are an end run around the people’s representatives — and therefore, around the people.

Then there is their reckless spending, triggering the highest inflation we’ve seen since the 1970s and lowering living standards for all Americans, hitting hardest those least able to afford it.

And now, to distract us from the wreckage and in a last-ditch effort to save their jobs in 2022, Democrats want to do what they do best: spend more taxpayer money. To pay for a portion of this spending, they would command drug companies to “negotiate” with Medicare on prices for certain brand-name drugs. “Negotiation” is a misnomer, however; if drug companies don’t agree with the government’s price, they would lose most of the revenue from those drugs’ sales. Congressional Democrats and their allies in the White House are determined to wreck our best-in-the-world health care system in much the same fashion as they’ve wrecked American energy, national security, education and constitutional governance.

Pharmaceuticals cost billions to develop, and many never make it to market. Continued investment in developing new drugs happens only because research and development pays off from time to time in the form of a “blockbuster” drug that makes billions — and covers the R&D costs of the once-promising drugs that didn’t pan out. Even the tantalizing possibility of developing a best-selling drug will not be enough to attract investment when the government can step in, dictate the price, and take away the profit that would have covered R&D losses. Undercutting this potential for profit means that capital will go elsewhere. Government cannot stop that, unless, of course, we abandon the free market and adopt a socialist economic system, which many on the left are clamoring for and which would explain why they seem determined to wreck our country.

Lower investment in the pharma sector means, of course, that the promise of many potential drugs will never be explored. Who knows what cures will never be developed — Would it have been for Alzheimer’s? Or pancreatic cancer? Or Parkinson’s? 

There are problems in our health care system that need to be addressed. But destroying the sector that has given so many of our citizens life-saving treatments and cures — especially to pay for more government spending and bureaucratic programs — is most certainly not the answer.

Beverly McKittrick is the director of the Regulatory Action Center (RAC) at FreedomWorks. Previously, she served in the Trump administration at the Department of Labor, Office of the Secretary.

https://thehill.com/opinion/congress-blog/3580619-democrats-destroying-our-economy-one-sector-at-a-time/

Reinfection, severe outcome more common with Omicron BA.5 variant

Compared with the earlier Omicron BA.2 subvariant, currently dominant Omicron BA.5 is linked with higher odds of causing a second SARS-COV-2 infection regardless of vaccination status, a study from Portugal suggests.

From late April through early June, researchers there studied 15,396 adults infected with the BA.2 variant and 12,306 infected with BA.5.Vaccines and boosters were equally effective against both sublineages, according to a report posted on Monday on medRxiv ahead of peer review.

However, 10% of BA.5 cases were reinfections, compared to 5.6% of BA.2 cases, which suggests a reduction in protection conferred by previous infection against BA.5 compared to BA.2, the researchers said. Moreover, the vaccines appeared to be less effective in reducing the risk of severe outcomes for BA.5 compared with BA.2.

“Among those infected with BA.5, booster vaccination was associated with 77% and 88% reduction in risk of COVID-19 hospitalization and death, respectively, while higher risk reduction was found for BA.2 cases, with 93% and 94%, respectively,” the researchers wrote.

While “COVID-19 booster vaccination still offers substantial protection against severe outcomes following BA.5 infection,” they said, their findings provide “evidence to adjust public health measures during the BA.5 surge.”

“That means once the heart is infected with SARS-CoV-2, it will activate the TLR4 signaling,” Zhiqiang Lin of the Masonic Medical Research Institute in Utica, New York said in a statement.

“We provided direct evidence that spike protein is toxic to the heart muscle cells and narrowed down the underlying mechanism as spike protein directly inflames the heart muscle cells,” he told Reuters. “More work is being done in my lab to test whether and how spike protein kills heart muscle cells.”

https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1637097/reinfection-severe-outcome-more-common-with-omicron-ba-5-variant-research