[Congressional Record Volume 160, Number 58 (Wednesday, April 9, 2014)]
[House]
[Page H3066]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGETING FOR MEDICAL BREAKTHROUGHS
(Mr. YARMUTH asked and was given permission to address the House for
1 minute.)
Mr. YARMUTH. Madam Speaker, budgets don't heal the sick or solve
centuries-long medical challenges, but the programs budgets prioritize
can.
In my district in Louisville, Kentucky, medical researchers at the
University of Louisville and the Frazier Rehab Institute have made an
incredible breakthrough. Thanks to an electronic implant that
stimulates the spinal cord, four paralyzed men are now moving their
legs on command. With continued therapy, they are confident they will
walk again.
The Human Locomotor Research Center in Louisville is funded in part
through investments made by the National Institutes of Health. More
than 80 percent of NIH funding goes to the broader research community,
fueling the innovation that makes breakthroughs like those in
Louisville possible.
The Republican budget reduces the number of new NIH grants by 1,400,
on top of hundreds of projects NIH has already had to turn down because
of last year's reckless, across-the-board spending cuts.
Madam Speaker, when you see a man paralyzed for years lift his legs,
you can't help but share in the enthusiasm for breaking boundaries we
once thought impassible. But if we approve this Republican budget and
these cuts, we extinguish that enthusiasm and the hopes of millions of
families waiting for the next medical breakthrough.
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