[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 92 (Friday, June 24, 2011)]
[House]
[Page H4565]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CONGRESSIONAL NEUROSCIENCE CAUCUS
(Mr. BLUMENAUER asked and was given permission to address the House
for 1 minute.)
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, yesterday we had the inaugural briefing
of the Congressional Neurologic Science Caucus. The caucus seeks to
involve and inform people on Capitol Hill about advances,
opportunities, and challenges that face us with neuroscience.
I appreciate the leadership of my colleague, Kathy McMorris Rodgers,
who is founding cochair of this effort and someone who cares deeply
about neuroscience issues, achieved in part through some difficult
personal experience. I admire her courage and appreciate her adding to
this important agenda.
We're discovering so many areas related to the brain and so much
about how the neurological system works, how it's damaged, how it
recovers, how the brain responds to our environment, understanding
interrelationships between traumatic brain injury, hydrocephalous,
dementia, Alzheimer's. We stand to gain so much from this research.
Developments in neuroscience offer the greatest opportunity for the
26 percent of American adults who suffer from mental disorders to
reduce and perhaps avoid dysfunction, disease to live better, healthier
lives.
The tremendous toll on victims and their families, their employees,
employers and friends, the Federal Government needs to be aggressively
involved and engaged. We hope the Neuroscience Caucus can help do just
that.
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