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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 25, 2005
SCHUMER REVEALS: FEDS HAVE RENEGED ON THEIR COMMITMENT
TO PROVIDE ADEQUATE TAMIFLU STOCKPILES
HHS Is Planning to Purchase Tamiflu for Far Fewer Than
the 100 million Americans that Need to Be Protected Against Bird
a Potential Flu Pandemic
With Roche Living Up to Its Promise to Dramatically
Increase Production Capacity, Schumer Calls on HHS to Make Good
on its Commitment to Stockpile Enough Tamiflu for Americans
Today U.S. Senator Charles Schumer revealed that the federal government
has reneged on its commitment to provide enough Tamiflu stockpiles
to safeguard Americans from a potential bird flu pandemic. Schumer
sent a letter to Michael Leavitt, Secretary of the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (HHS), urging him to dramatically increase
stockpiles for Tamiflu, the only anti-viral currently available
to treat Bird Flu. Schumer has been a leader in getting Roche Pharmaceuticals,
the manufacturer, to increase Tamiflu production capacity and he
has repeatedly urged the Federal government to stockpile enough
of the bird flu anti-viral treatment to cover at least 100 million
Americans, which is how many people experts tell us the government
should stockpile the treatment for. Schumer also helped to secure
over $2 billion in federal funding for HHS specifically for pandemic
preparations, but HHS has spent only a very small portion of those
funds to stockpiling Tamiflu, leaving millions of Americans unprotected.
Schumer said, “The bottom line is that the Feds are falling
way short of their commitment to protect Americans from a bird flu
pandemic. HHS needs to significantly boost its Tamiflu orders so
that they at least meet the minimum safeguards suggested by most
experts – anti-viral stockpiles to protect 100 million Americans.”
Schumer’s letter to Sec. Leavitt stressed that simply shifting
the burden to states to purchase Tamiflu without full reimbursement
undercuts their commitment to safeguard Americans with significant
stockpiles. HHS has the funding to purchase enough antivirals, but
under its new plan, it leaves the states with the expensive and
difficult task of buying Tamiflu on its own, without full or quick
reimbursement.
And even worse, HHS is rebuffing questions from states that are
trying to access the paltry 25% subsidy that HHS did promise. States
have received more assistance from the manufacturer and a non-profit
organization, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials,
than they have from HHS.
In recent weeks, bird flu has spread to Turkey which now has 21
reported cases. Most of the cases have been in children. All but
two of the 21 confirmed human cases, it said, have involved children
aged four to 18.
The bird flu (knows as H5N1) has killed tens and maybe hundreds
of millions of animals since it appeared in Asia in 1997 and has
infected 120 people, killing half. The strain has been identified
as a type A influenza virus which is both genetically versatile
and able to elude a variety of defenses making it extraordinarily
dangerous. This specific type of virus constantly changes as it
replicates. Additionally H5N1 has never been a strain of flu before,
so nobody has any form of immunity to this type of flu.
Even birds that survive the infection excrete the virus for at
least 10 days, orally and in feces, thereby facilitating further
spread at live poultry markets and by migratory birds. The spread
of infection in birds increases the opportunities for direct infection
of humans. If more humans become infected over time, the likelihood
also increases that humans, if infected with both human and avian
influenza strains, could serve as the “mixing vessel”
for the emergence of a new strain with sufficient human genes to
be easily transmitted from person to person. Such an event would
mark the start of an influenza pandemic.
In October, Schumer provided the names of four companies to Mr.
George Abercrombie, the CEO of Roche in the United States. Roche
has reached agreements with two of those companies along with 13
other entities around the world. Roche agreed in October to sub-license
the production of Tamiflu to any of these companies that can produce
it in quantities large enough to help meet the anticipated demand
in case of a flu outbreak, and the determination as to who gets
licensed will be made in cooperation with the U.S. Government and
other governments around the world.
Schumer’s letter to Secretary Leavitt is below:
January 25, 2006
The Honorable Michael Leavitt, Secretary
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20201
Dear Secretary Leavitt:
I am writing today to urge you to immediately provide clear
guidance and assistance to states that wish to stockpile the antiviral
Tamiflu in preparation for a potential avian flu pandemic. I am
concerned that states seem to have received far more guidance from
the manufacturer of Tamiflu and from a non-profit association regarding
this Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) initiative than
from the Department itself.
In the National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza, HHS revealed
an initiative to subsidize states for 25% of the cost of developing
antiviral stockpiles. At that time, two impediments remained to
enacting this initiative: ensuring that the Roche Pharmaceuticals
– the sole manufacturer of the only antiviral currently known
to be effective against avian flu - could produce an adequate supply,
and providing appropriations to HHS for the subsidy.
Both obstacles have since been removed. I have worked with
Roche over the past several months to assist in forging partnerships
with outside companies to fill gaps in its supply chain, and Congress
appropriated $2.75 billion in the Fiscal Year 2006 Department of
Defense Appropriations that the Secretary may use for avian flu
vaccines, antivirals, and other necessary medical supplies. I wrote
to you on December 23, asking you to immediately allocate $1.8 billion
of that money for a federal antiviral stockpile, but have not heard
back from you.
Although I believe that an antiviral stockpile is a federal
responsibility that should not be passed on to the states, we should
ensure at the very least that states have the ability to access
the 25% subsidy proposed in the National Strategy. However, I understand
that New York, along with several other states, has been unable
to access this subsidy or to receive any information from HHS as
to how or when it may do so.
Disturbingly, states have received much more information from
Roche Pharmaceuticals and from the Association of State and Territorial
Health Officials (ASTHO), than they have from HHS. Roche proactively
contacted each State Department of Health and has reportedly been
very responsive to them, and ASTHO has made itself available to
answer states’ questions as well. Where is HHS in this process?
In fact, of the eleven State Health Department officials who
have been in contact with my office, five states are purchasing
Tamiflu with funds diverted from other programs because they have
not been able to access the HHS subsidy. Although ten of the eleven
states had contacted Roche to ask for help, only four had spoken
to HHS, and two of those four reported that HHS was unhelpful or
non-responsive. And worst of all, four of the eleven states did
not even know that a federal subsidy existed.
I urge you to immediately contact all fifty State Health Departments
to inform them of the subsidy and assist them in accessing it. I
further urge you to use $1.8 billion of the $3.2 billion appropriated
to HHS by the United States Congress for antiviral stockpiling,
rather than passing the costs of this expensive and vital public
health project onto the states. Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely,
Charles Schumer
U.S. Senator
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