Primary Contacts

Maria T. Currier
Partner
Miami

Maria T. Currier chairs the firm's National Healthcare and Life Sciences Team. With over 21 years of experience serving clients in the healthcare industry, her practice focuses on health...

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Jeffrey Mittleman
Partner
Boston

Jeffrey W. Mittleman is a partner in the Business Section of Holland & Knight and is a member of the firm's national Healthcare & Life Sciences Team and Compliance Services...

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Shannon Hartsfield Salimone
Partner
Tallahassee
Jacksonville

Shannon Hartsfield Salimone is the regulatory and litigation leader of the firm's Healthcare & Life Sciences Team. She practices in the area of health law, advising clients on state...

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Michael M. Gaba
Partner
Washington

Michael M. Gaba is a partner in the Washington, D.C. office of Holland & Knight where he is the federal policy leader of the firm’s national Healthcare & Life Sciences...

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Articles & White Papers
Healthcare & Life Sciences

Comparative Effectiveness: Will it Foster FDA–CMS Collaboration or Drive the Agencies Apart?
 

Update Magazine

March 31, 2009
 
Michael M. Gaba- Washington

The Obama Administration and the 111th Congress have agreed to spend $1.1 billion in federal funding on comparative effectiveness research as part of the $787 billion economic stimulus package known as the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The provider community, and particularly the industries developing the interventions to be compared, need to consider how this new policy and funding surge will impact how they invest their research and development resources and demonstrate their technologies are worthy of coverage and payment both by public and private sector insurers. While the House of Representatives and Senate agreed on the $1.1 billion price tag, they did not agree on the appropriate use of comparative effectiveness data. With cost versus clinical use being at the heart of the effectiveness debate, the balance of power between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) may be shifting.

Update Magazine 2009, Issue 2

With permission from FDLI

READ: Comparative Effectiveness: Will it Foster FDA–CMS Collaboration or Drive the Agencies Apart?

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