Monday, May 12, 2008

Congress is Considering Additional Funding for NIH & FDA



Congress is Considering Additional Funding for NIH & FDA
Support Additional Funds for NIH and FDA

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Congress is considering the FY 2008 supplemental appropriations bill this week. The committee intends to include $400 million for the National Institutes of Health in this spending package. If successful, the committee would provide the National Cancer Institute with up to an additional $65 million on top of the $4.8 billion already appropriated in FY 2008. The inclusion of these funds in a supplemental funding bill is extremely rare and illustrates the strength of support that cancer research has in Congress.


In FY 2008, NCI received a budget increase of 0.3 percent over FY 2007, while biomedical inflation rose approximately 3.5 percent. Five years of flat funding have significantly hindered research progress and have forced NIH and NCI to make difficult funding decisions and to make painful cuts to ongoing research projects, including the delay and scaling back of clinical trials. When the NCI budget falls, we see that ovarian cancer research is cut back significantly.


This additional $400 million would be enough for NIH to support an additional 700 research grants in FY 2008 at institutions across the country. An additional $65 million to NCI is much needed and will help NCI to maintain support for research and much-needed access to valuable clinical trials.


Secondly, Senator Herbert Kohl (D-WI) has offered an amendment to include an additional $275 million for FDA in the supplemental which will help ensure patient access to safe and effective drugs and therapies. Funding for FDA has not kept pace with inflation in recent years so this additional funding is needed now more than ever.


Please contact your elected officials to tell them that you support increased funds for drug safety and cancer research.


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