Biden’s beef with Moderna

From: POLITICO Future Pulse - Friday Mar 24,2023 06:02 pm
The ideas and innovators shaping health care
Mar 24, 2023 View in browser
 
Future Pulse

By Carmen Paun, Ben Leonard, Ruth Reader and Erin Schumaker

WEEKEND READ

Moderna CEO and Director Stephane Bancel arrives to testify to the Senate HELP Committee on the price of the COVID-19 vaccine, Wednesday, March 22, 2023, on Capitol Hill in Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel faced his Senate nemesis, Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), this week on Capitol Hill. | AP

President Joe Biden didn’t rush to Moderna CEO Stéphane Bancel’s defense this week as the Covid-19 vaccine maker faced accusations of greed from Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) on Capitol Hill.

It indicated how much the White House’s relationship has deteriorated with the company whose product has saved millions of lives, marring one of the most successful public-private partnerships in U.S. history, reports POLITICO’s Adam Cancryn and Lauren Egan.

The drugmaker and the government have repeatedly clashed over the price the U.S. should pay for Moderna’s vaccines. They also have argued over the company’s responsibility to ensure that people with low incomes in the U.S. and abroad have access to the shots.

Inside the administration, Biden officials openly complain about Moderna’s hardball negotiation tactics and characterize its representatives as difficult to deal with.

A Moderna spokesperson defended the company’s work during the pandemic, saying in a statement that “we value our relationship with the U.S. government” and would look for future opportunities to collaborate.

In his testimony before the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which Sanders chairs, Bancel thanked the government for its support and said Moderna had provided its vaccines so far at a “discount” — though he noted “we were under no obligation to do so.”

Bancel has also promised that unininsured Americans won’t have to pay for Moderna’s Covid jabs.

But he didn’t explain how the company would ensure that those vaccines would continue to be free or give ground in the company’s dispute with the White House about how indebted the company should be for the help it got in developing the Covid vaccine.

 

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WORLD VIEW

MPIGI, UGANDA - DECEMBER 6: HIV positive orphans take anti retro viral (ARV) drugs at the Aidchild Orphanage on December 6, 2005 in Mpigi, 60 km north of the capital Kampala, Uganda. Aidchild provides homes, academics and clinics for about 70 orphans living with AIDS who do not have the support of extended families. Uganda is pioneering the battle against AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa, bringing its national prevalence of the disease down from a peak of 18.3% to an estimated 6.2% currently. (Photo by Marco Di Lauro/Getty Images)

HIV positive orphans take antiretroviral drugs in Uganda. | Getty Images

Don’t doubt the U.S. commitment to the fight against HIV and AIDS, despite President Joe Biden’s modest proposed cut to the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief.

That’s according to Atul Gawande, the Harvard professor who now leads global health at the U.S. Agency for International Development.

“This is not a rollback on the focus of HIV/AIDS,” Gawande said during an event sponsored by the Meridian diplomacy center Thursday.

Biden wants to reduce PEPFAR funding in fiscal 2024 by $25 million compared with the $4.7 billion enacted for this fiscal year.

Wider angle: Gawande said a fuller picture of the administration’s global health funding proposal reveals Biden’s commitment.

For example, the U.S. still plans to put $2 billion into the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, he said.

Gawande also pointed to Biden’s $20 million request for the Global Health Worker Initiative, with an aim to reduce the shortage of health workers in developing countries.

“There’s a recognition that we cannot make any of our programs — the HIV program, the malaria program, child survival — succeed when the core base of health workers was decimated during the pandemic,” Gawande said.

 

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