Welcome to Friday’s Overnight Health Care. Anthony Fauci has probably done hundreds of interviews in the past year, but we are most excited to watch him talk with former NFL running back Marshawn Lynch— aka "Beastmode." If you have any tips, email us at nweixel@thehill.com, psullivan@thehill.com and jcoleman@thehill.com Follow us on Twitter at @NateWeixel, @PeterSullivan4 and @JustineColeman8 Today: The Biden administration reversed a ban on fetal tissue research. Johnson & Johnson scientists said they do not see a casual relationship between their vaccine and blood clots and the Biden administration is investing $1.7 billion into combating COVID variants. We'll start at the NIH: It’s official: NIH reverses Trump administration's ban on fetal tissue research The National Institutes of Health (NIH) officially on Friday rescinded the ban on using fetal tissues in research, reversing a Trump-era policy instituted almost two years ago. In a notice, the agency announced it was overturning the Trump administration’s policy that an ethics board to review all applicants for NIH grants involving fetal tissue from elective abortions. Trump also blocked NIH scientists from obtaining new fetal tissue derived from abortions for research purposes. The notice also said the Department of Health and Human Services and NIH will no longer assemble an NIH Human Fetal Fetal Tissue Research Ethics Advisory Board. "NIH reminds the community of expectations to obtain informed consent from the donor for any NIH-funded research using human fetal tissue … and of continued obligations to conduct such research only in accord with any applicable federal, state, or local laws and regulations, including prohibitions on the payment of valuable consideration for such tissue,” the notice reads. The move comes after a group of 26 Democratic House members wrote to President Biden calling for an end to the restriction on research involving fetal tissue Read more here. Growing focus on variants: Biden administration investing $1.7B into tracking, combating COVID-19 variants The Biden administration on Friday unveiled its plans to invest $1.7 billion into tracking and combating COVID-19 variants as new strains make up about half of all infections across the nation. The administration announced its planned distribution of federal funding from the American Rescue Plan directed at assisting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and state and local governments in detecting and monitoring COVID-19 variants. The plan allocates $1 billion to bolstering genomic sequencing through providing money to laboratories for collecting COVID-19 samples, sequencing the DNA and releasing the data. A total of $400 million will go toward innovation initiatives, including founding six Centers of Excellence in Genomic Epidemiology, and another $300 million is set for a data system to track sequencing information. Key quote: "Our ability to spot variants as they emerge and spread is vital, particularly as we aim to get ahead of dangerous variances before they emerge, as they are in the Midwest right now," Andy Slavitt, senior White House pandemic adviser, said. Read more here. |
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