Pharmaceutical industry spends record $155M
lobbying Federal government from 2005 through
first half of 2006, study finds
Apr 03, 2007--Pharmaceutical companies and their
trade associations spent a record $155 million
lobbying Congress from January 2005 through June
2006, according to a study released on Sunday by
the
Center for Public Integrity,
Bloomberg/Chicago Tribune
reports (Bloomberg/Chicago
Tribune, 4/3).
Drug makers dispatched about 1,100 agents to
lobby congressional committees and
administration offices during each of the
last two years, the study found. The drug
industry was successful in achieving some of
its major goals, such as upholding a
government ban on the reimportation of
prescription drugs, according to the study.
Asif Ismail, director of the center's project to
monitor the drug industry, said, "Essentially
what they did is they blocked any legislation."
He added, "There have been several attempts to
revisit this issue, and importation is still
illegal" (Alonso-Zaldivar,
Los
Angeles Times,
4/3). The drug industry also was successful in
blocking legislation that would have allowed the
federal government to negotiate prescription
drug prices for Medicare, the report found.
Ismail wrote that attempts to pass the provision
failed "after a huge lobbying blitz," adding
that the failed legislation "is often cited as a
poster child for the industry's influence in
Washington" (Bloomberg/Chicago
Tribune, 4/3).
According to the
Los Angeles Times, the "battles are expected to be fought
more fiercely this year" with a Democratic
majority in Congress. Sidney Wolfe, director of
Public Citizen's Health Research Group,
said, "The industry is going to spend more money
this time than the record amount that is
reported by the center. From the perspective of
the industry, this money is extremely well
spent, because they have used it to win
virtually every important battle."
Industry Response
Ken Johnson, senior vice president of the
Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of
America,
said, "The Center for Public Integrity's report,
not surprisingly, misses the mark when it comes
to efforts by America's pharmaceutical research
companies to educate policymakers." He added,
"Our priority has always been to help advance
patient health and ... we have supported
policies and programs that bolster patient
access to safe and effective medicines" (Los
Angeles Times, 3/4).