Friday, March 16, 2012

Senators introduce bipartisan effort to make medical devices safer

Oregon's Senator Jeff Merkley, with Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA), Michael Bennet (D-CO) and Herb Kohl (D-WI), introduced the bipartisan Ensuring Safe Medical Devices for Patients Act. The bill would give the Food and Drug Administration the tools it needs to improve oversight of medical devices. Defective medical devices have been associated with thousands of deaths in recent years.

"As the Senate Special Committee on Aging heard first-hand last year, faulty medical devices, especially those implanted in the body, can have a disastrous impact on the health of those who use them," Kohl said. "Innovative technology has provided valuable, life-saving medical devices that have prolonged life and reduced suffering, but the drive toward getting new technologies to market shouldn't be done at the risk of patient safety. This legislation will help achieve that needed and delicate balance between safety and innovation."

Safety problems and recalls of certain medical devices, including metal-on-metal hips, surgical mesh, and implantable programmable infusion pumps have called into question whether the FDA and its Center for Devices and Radiologic Health (CDRH) have the tools needed to protect patients and keep harmful devices off the market. An average of 700 different medical devices has been recalled every year since 2005. Harmful or defective devices were associated with the death of almost 5,000 Americans in 2009 alone.

The legislation builds on two important, bipartisan initiatives to improve the oversight of medical devices:

  • Requires FDA to issue a final Unique Device Identifier (UDI) rule by the end of 2012, requiring implantable devices to carry a unique numerical identifier so products can be tracked through the distribution chain and once they are being used with patients. The UDI program was created nearly five years ago but FDA has not implemented it.

  • Adds medical devices to the Sentinel post-marketing surveillance initiative, launched in 2008. Sentinel is a national, integrated, electronic system which currently monitors prescription drug safety after FDA approval, once the drugs are being marketed to patients.

The bill has been endorsed by Consumers Union, National Women's Health Network, National Research Center for Women and Families, Health Care Supply Chain Association, the Premier Healthcare Alliance, Association of American Medical Colleges, Alliance for Advancing Nonprofit Health Care, National Association For Continence, MedicAlert Foundation, Public Citizen, and Union of Concerned Scientists. Visit the Senator Kohl’s newsroom for the article.

"Show me the money"

Dr.Carlos Nunez, Chief Medical Officer at CareFusion explores trends and issues facing the healthcare industry and in respiratory care practices at CareFusion’s Online Center for Safety. In his most recent post, Dr. Nunez discusses the need for greater cost control in healthcare.

“A curious thing is happening. As the healthcare conversation moved front and center over the last several years, a correlation developed linking cost and quality. Politicians and providers,payors and patients have embraced these complementary themes as the “one-two punch” that will win the fight to keep our healthcare system safe, solvent and sustainable. As far as punches go, it sounds almost painless: Make the system better and safer, and the savings will follow. Who would argue with that logic?

Now it seems that some prominent voices have started to pivot the conversation toward the need for greater cost control, suggesting that quality and safety efforts alone may not deliver the necessary savings. Recently, three opinion pieces appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) and the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) that call into question some basic assumptions about the economics of our health care system. Another article, published in Healthcare Finance News, added a new sense of urgency to this pivot in opinion.”

Visit here to read the blog.