[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 3 (Thursday, January 8, 2015)]
[House]
[Page H110]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH FUNDING
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Cohen) for 5 minutes.
Mr. COHEN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to call the Congress' attention
to what I think is our most important issue we face as a Congress and
as a people, and that is preserving America's greatest asset, which is
the health and lives of our citizens.
In doing so, I request, as I have done on many occasions, that my
colleagues on both sides of the aisle join me in adequately funding our
Nation's other department of defense--coequally important--the National
Institutes of Health.
Yes, the Department of Defense is important, and we fund it more than
adequately, more than they even ask for, and it protects us from ISIS
and others that caused the great tragedy in Paris and has caused terror
and havoc in Great Britain, Australia, and Canada and that I am sure
will come to our shores sooner than we expect, but the National
Institutes of Health protects us from disease, disease that threatens
every American and every American's loved one.
The sequestration has cut billions from NIH's budget, and that is our
country's foremost medical research center. It has helped billions of
people across the country and across the world who suffer from heart
disease, cancer, HIV/AIDS, diabetes, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, you name
it, but we have inadequately funded the NIH.
It has not kept up with the level of inflation over the last decade.
Based on that level of inflation, the funding we have given the NIH has
resulted in a 10 percent diminution in funding on the purchasing power
of the National Institutes of Health.
The likelihood of any one of us dying from a terrorist attack or from
some weapon fired from North Korea or Russia or Iran is very slim, but
the odds of us suffering from the diseases which I have mentioned
previously is likely in our loved ones. We need to fight those
diseases. We can do it, and we can successfully come up with treatments
and cures if we fund the National Institutes of Health.
Supporting the NIH used to be a bipartisan commitment, especially
seeing that every dollar invested results in about $2.21 in economic
growth. I hope that this new American Congress will see that and that
my Republican colleagues will agree with me that we need to put a focus
on our individual capital, the personal capital of people, their health
and their well-being.
I talked to Representative Marino recently, and he is going to join
me in founding an NIH caucus. I think there is nothing more important.
In the past, many times, when I have brought up funding for the NIH,
friends on the other side have said: ``Well, we will have to pay for
it. If we put more money in it, then our children and grandchildren
will be paying for the debt for years to come.''
That may be true, but nevertheless, the children and the
grandchildren will be receiving the benefits of the treatments and
cures more likely than any of us will, for research takes a long time.
We also need to change our course in stem cell research. We have had
problems with allowing scientists to use this opportunity to come
through with great medical breakthroughs.
Federal funding is currently prohibited by the 1996 Dickey amendment
to the appropriations bill that funds the NIH, but researchers around
the world have dived headfirst into the field using stem cells and
producing incredible findings and progress.
In 2010, a gentleman named Darek Fidyka, a Polish man, was stabbed
multiple times in a knife attack, and he was paralyzed from the chest
down, but thanks to stem cell research in Poland, in collaboration with
researchers and doctors there and in the United Kingdom, Darek can now
walk again with the help of a walker.
Dr. Geoff Raisman, the chair of neurological regeneration at
University College London's Institute of Neurology called this
development--and I agree with him--``more impressive than man walking
on the Moon.''
{time} 1030
We allowed a man who couldn't walk, couldn't stand to walk, and more
will come from that research on stem cells and other scientific
research. Darek otherwise would have been paralyzed for life, and now
he is walking again thanks to private investment in stem cell research,
but the government needs to participate.
Mr. Speaker, it is time for this Congress to adequately fund the
National Institutes of Health, recognize its importance to our
constituents who are important to us, and whose lives and health are
the most important things that we can provide for them. It is time this
country no longer turns a blind eye to research, and to stem cell
research in particular. I urge my colleagues to seize the opportunities
offered by this new Congress and join me in the efforts to fund the
National Institutes of Health and to join the National Institutes of
Health Caucus.
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