The U.S. government yesterday announced more than $1.4 billion in grants to develop new vaccines and other technology to counter COVID-19.
The awards are part of the government’s $5 billion Project NextGen, which replaced Operation Warp Speed. According to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), awards include:
What they’re saying: “Project NextGen is a key part of the Biden-Harris Administration’s commitment to keeping people safe from COVID-19 variants,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra. “These awards are a catalyst for the program—kickstarting efforts to more quickly develop vaccines and continue to ensure availability of effective treatments.”
The context: New COVID variants are spreading across the U.S. and worldwide, causing an uptick in hospitalizations. While updated boosters coming this fall are expected to be effective against new strains, public health officials remain concerned about possible mutations, highlighting the need for continued innovation.
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Bloomberg: Drug benefit firms devise new fees that go to them, not clients
“Documents and industry insiders suggest that PBMs’ pledges to pass the rebates they get from drugmakers back to their clients are a sleight of hand. In recent years, PBMs have changed what they call some of the money they take from pharma. Instead of rebates, these payments now go by such names as ‘administration fees,’ ‘data fees’ or ‘inflation protection.’”