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Update: October 24, 2000
Thanks to a nationwide grassroots effort the Breast and
Cervical Cancer Treatment Act has passed and was signed into law by
the President on October 24, 2000.
Important update: October 5, 2000.
Click Here for Previous Alert and
Important and Relevant Information on this issue.
The Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act
-- S. 662 passed the Senate on October 4, 2000, thanks in large part to the
work of advocates across the country! The House overwhelmingly passed its
version, H.R. 4386 on May 9, 2000 and we now need the two bills to be
reconciled quickly in conference before the Congressional recess takes place
later this month.
Efforts to enact this
legislation are far from over and we need your continued help and support.
CALL TO ACTION
We need to urge the House Leadership to put the
Senate-passed H.R. 4386, the Breast and Cervical Cancer Treatment Act, on
the suspension calendar immediately.
Time is of the essence and the House of Representatives
needs to adopt the language of the Senate-passed bill. Once the language is
reconciled and identical (House and Senate versions) the House can vote on
the bill, pass the legislation and move it to the President to sign into
law.
It is imperative that a CLEAN BILL is passed. We have
indications that members of Congress may try to attach amendments to the
legislation to ride on the coattails of the Breast and Cervical Cancer
Prevention and Treatment Act. To do so under the constraints of the short
timeline we are working under could kill this legislation and result in a
death sentence for the underserved patients the legislation is intended to
serve and to save. We also have reason to believe that Congressman Tom
Coburn (R-OK) may try to block the legislation from the House of
Representatives’ suspension calendar and from going to the House floor for
a vote, period, unless the legislation is changed to accommodate specific
language he wants put into the final version.
PLEASE ACT NOW and urge the House leadership to pass a
clean bill, the Senate version of H.R. 4386 on suspension as soon as
possible.
WE NEED YOU TO ACT DECISIVELY AND IMMEDIATELY to contact
the following Members in the House Leadership with this message:
Pass the Breast and Cervical Cancer Treatment Act
Now-before you leave for the October recess -- patients’ lives depend on
it! Inaction to move this bill to the President’s desk this month will
put all too many patients lives in jeopardy. PLEASE ACT NOW to pass a
clean bill, the Senate version of H.R. 4386 on suspension as soon as
possible.
Please call, e-mail and/or fax this message immediately to
the following Members of the House of Representatives Leadership:
Speaker of the House, J. Dennis Hastert (R-IL): telephone:
(202) 225-0600/2976; fax: 202-225-0697; e-mail: dhastert@mail.house.gov
Majority Leader, Richard Armey (R-TX): telephone: (202)
225-4000/7772; fax: 202-226-2028; e-mail: tx26@legislators.com
Majority Whip, Tom DeLay (R-TX): telephone: (202)
225-0197/5951; fax: 202-225-5241; e-mail: tx22@legislators.com
Minority Leader, Richard Gephardt (D-MO): telephone: (202)
225-0100/2671; fax: 202-225-7452; e-mail: gephardt@mail.house.gov
Minority Whip, David E. Bonior (D-MI): telephone: (202)
225-2106; fax: 202-226-1169; e-mail: davidbonior@mail.house.gov
Please call, e-mail and/or fax this message immediately to:
Congressman Tom Coburn (R-OK): telephone: (202) 225-2701;
fax: 202-225-3038; e-mail: rep.coburn@mail.house.gov
Summary
The Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment
Act:
The
United States Senate passed H.R. 4386, to amend title XIX of the Social
Security Act to provide medical assistance for certain patients screened and
diagnosed with breast or cervical cancer under a federally funded screening
program.
This important new legislation will give underserved and indigent
patients who have been screened and diagnosed with breast and/or cervical
cancer through the CDC's National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection
Program the chance to receive vital treatment that is truly a matter of life
and death. The Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act
will allow states the option of providing Medicaid services to medically
underserved and indigent breast and cervical cancer patients.
Uninsured breast cancer patients are 49% more likely to die than are
patients with health insurance during the four to seven years following
their initial breast cancer diagnosis.
It is imperative and a moral obligation to provide life-saving treatment
for medically indigent, underserved and uninsured breast and cervical cancer
patients who are not able to pay for treatment on their own.
This important and long overdue legislation will give states the option
of providing Medicaid coverage to low-income breast and cervical cancer
patients who are diagnosed through the National Breast and Cervical Cancer
Early Detection Program under the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention, CDC.
Background
It is estimated that breast and cervical cancer will claim
more than half a million lives in this decade alone. Breast cancer is the
number one killer of American women between the ages of 35 and 54. The
reality is, cancer screening alone cannot save lives.
In 1990 legislation established the Center for Disease
Control's National Breast and Cervical Early Detection Program. This vital
program ensures that medically underserved women in this country receive
regular breast and cervical cancer screening. Over 1.4 million women have
been screened for breast or cervical cancer since 1991. More women are
screened for these devastating diseases every day.
Early detection is a key weapon in the fight against
cancer. The success of the CDC program is proven. Because of this program,
over 6,800 uninsured, low-income women throughout the United States have
breast been diagnosed with breast cancer. In addition, over 34,000
uninsured, low-income women across the U.S. have been diagnosed with either
invasive cervical cancer or pre-cancerous cervical lesions.
It is estimated that breast and cervical cancer will claim
more than half a million lives in this decade alone. Breast cancer is the
number one killer of American women between the ages of 35 and 54. The
reality is, cancer screening alone cannot save lives.
The Problem
When the National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program
passed in 1990, advocates and members of Congress wanted to ensure that
patients screened and diagnosed with breast and cervical cancer through the
CDC program would also receive appropriate treatment. The law was written to
require states to seek out services for the women they screen in order to
receive timely and appropriate treatment. Unfortunately, state programs are
overwhelmed and connecting underserved patients to treatment services has
been an enormous challenge. In too many cases, medically underserved and
indigent patients are left with the burden of finding the money and
resources necessary to receive life-saving treatment.
The Solution
Ensuring that the Breast and Cervical Cancer Prevention and Treatment Act
is signed into law by President Clinton over the next several days before
Congress takes its fall recess.
The Bottom Line
A clean bill must be passed without any amendments. The language of the
two bills must reconciled quickly in conference before the Congressional
recess takes place later this month.
Last Updated: 06/01/2004
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