HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.C.R. NO. |
70 |
TWENTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2004 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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RESOLUTION
Urging Congress to Pass Federal legislation to provide access to safe, affordable prescription drugs by allowing purchase of prescription drugS from canada and other countries that meet federal safety requirements and requesting the secretary of health and human services to support and implement reimportation.
WHEREAS, the cost of prescription drugs has risen steadily in recent years, affecting consumers, businesses or employers, and public programs, while the pharmaceutical industry has been named as the most profitable among the Fortune 500 Companies in 2002; and
WHEREAS, Americans pay more for prescription drugs than in any other industrialized nation; in Canada, for example, a three-month supply of the best selling prescription drug Lipitor is thirty-seven per cent cheaper; Paxil is approximately fifty per cent cheaper; Vioxx is fifty-eight per cent cheaper; and the anti-psychotic drug Risperdal is eighty per cent cheaper; and
WHEREAS, in May 2003, Hawaii's Attorney General joined thirty-seven other attorneys general in a letter to Congress, seeking relief for consumers from the high cost of prescriptions and pointing out that the high cost of many brand-name prescription drugs makes lifesaving medications out of reach for many individuals; and
WHEREAS, the federal Food and Drug Administration has refused to certify as safe for reimportation prescription medication from Canada and other foreign countries, which would allow United States citizens, state and county governments, and businesses access to prescription drugs at much lower prices; and
WHEREAS, to justify its refusal, the Food and Drug Administration contends that reimportation from other countries could jeopardize consumer safety because pharmaceuticals from other countries will not be subject to the same requirements imposed by the United States; and
WHEREAS, a number of governors and mayors already are taking steps to provide prescription drugs from Canada to state employees, retirees, and residents; and
WHEREAS, in recent legislation, Congress authorized drug reimportation from Canada, giving United States Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy Thompson the authority to grant exceptions to allow states to purchase Canadian drugs for state employees and retirees; and
WHEREAS, it is likely, however, that the practice of reimportation will remain illegal; for example, Secretary Thompson quickly denied Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich's request for an exemption, declaring that he would waive federal regulations only if he could guarantee the safety of prescription drugs from Canada; and
WHEREAS, recent research indicates that Canada's drug approval system is as stringent as that of the United States and pharmacy practices in the Canadian provinces of Manitoba and Ontario were deemed equal to or superior to pharmacy practice in Illinois; and
WHEREAS, there is pending federal legislation that will enable the reimportation of prescription drugs from Canada and other industrialized countries that can meet regulatory requirements to ensure that consumers and government agencies have access to safe prescription drugs at reasonable costs; now, therefore,
BE IT RESOLVED by the House of Representatives of the Twenty-second Legislature of the State of Hawaii, Regular Session of 2004, the Senate concurring, that members of Congress, including Hawaii's congressional delegation, are urged to establish as an immediate priority the passage of legislation that makes safe, affordable prescription drugs accessible to all United States residents through reimportation and other means, including requesting the cooperation of the United States Secretary of Health and Human Services and the Food and Drug Administration; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that certified copies of this Concurrent Resolution be transmitted to the President of the United States Senate, the Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, the Secretary of Health and Human Services, the Food and Drug Administration, and members of Hawaii's delegation to the United States Congress.
OFFERED BY: |
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Report Title:
Congressional and FDA; Reimportation of Prescription Drugs