RECESS IS OVER — Lawmakers return from recess to a lot of health care work, including a pair of hearings Wednesday where United Healthcare CEO Andrew Witty will testify in the wake of the massive cyberattack at its subsidiary, Change Healthcare. The Senate Finance Committee will kick off Witty’s grilling, followed by a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing in the afternoon. Additionally, the E&C Committee will hold a hearing this morning on a bevy of Medicaid-related bills, many of them bipartisan. That includes legislation that would bar HHS from implementing its mandatory minimum staffing proposal for nursing homes, finalized last week. E&C Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.) and ranking member Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) have legislation that would expand access to home and community-based care. Daniel Tsai, director of the Center for Medicaid and CHIP Services, will testify. Here’s a (non-exhaustive) list of other health care hearings scheduled for this week: — The House Oversight Committee has slated EcoHealth Alliance president, Dr. Peter Daszak, to testify before the panel Wednesday in what will likely be a contentious hearing over Covid-19’s origins and gain-of-function research. — The Senate Armed Services Personnel Subcommittee meets today on ensuring servicemember’s access to “safe, high-quality pharmaceuticals.” — The Senate HELP Committee will meet Thursday on maternal health issues and a “severe shortage of minority health care professionals.” — The Senate Veterans’ Affairs Committee will discuss the VA’s budget request Wednesday. The Senate Appropriations Committee will meet on the topic Thursday. — The House Appropriations Labor-HHS-Education Subcommittee will have its member day hearing this morning. — The House Appropriations Interior-Environment Subcommittee will discuss the Indian Health Service’s budget request Wednesday. CBO BILL PASSES HOUSE — The House passed legislation by voice vote Monday that would make it easier for the Congressional Budget Office to get data from federal agencies like HHS. The legislation from House Budget Committee ranking member Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.) and Chair Jodey Arrington (R-Texas) would give the scorekeeper more power by speeding up data-sharing from federal agencies. Currently, federal agencies have to hand over data unless it would be “a violation of the law.” The legislation would require CBO to keep the same level of confidentiality as agencies. The CBO has said that while it “generally” can obtain information from the executive branch, questions about its authority can slow that access. “Unfortunately, CBO … often faces delays and roadblocks in receiving the data they need to inform Congressional decision-making,” Boyle said in a statement after the bill advanced through the committee in February. The CBO estimates that the legislation wouldn’t add to spending. HHS didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment. The bigger picture: It’s the latest move from Budget Committee lawmakers to change how the CBO operates. Last month, Congress passed legislation that would require the CBO to weigh whether a bill would save money over a 30-year budget window instead of 10 if Congress were to request it. That bill aimed to address concerns that the CBO’s scores don’t sufficiently reflect the benefits of preventive care.
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