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Hello, and welcome back. Im steve clemons. We are delighted to have you join us for the second hour of the future of the health care summit. I would like to thank the support for todays great program. We are going to expand our lens in the session to look at policymaking breakthroughs and innovation in the face of seen and unseen challenges. Before we get underway, a few housekeeping notes. At an tweet us thehillhealth. If you experience a problem with the livestream, refresh. It should be a quick fix. I dont believe them, but thats what they say. Has a breath of experience of both the public and private sectors. Focuses on health care and innovation, all assuming added significance. Had a really fantastic forum and it wouldnt be what it would be without you. Let me start off and ask you, we have had various discussions of coronavirus challenges from the frontline, what is going on in communities, the debate around school. What i am interested in right now is vaccine. Vaccines. Vaccines seem to be vital. Is anything that you can tell us where we are at on that front . The oversight and encouragement of the vaccine that save us mr. Azar thank you for asking about that will save us. Mr. Azar thank you for asking about lightspeed. I have heard the Pharma Company timelines. I used to work at a Pharmaceutical Company and i know these timelines. I know they are drawn out. Can we, with the full might of the u. S. Government and all of the Financial Resources that we can bring to bear, can we compress those timelines while still delivering safety and efficacy on vaccines . We said, yes, we can. We are following two tracks. The first is you can compress the Development Timeline by reducing any unnecessary delay or inefficiency in that system. In atcond is to invest scale upfront commercial delivery rather than waiting until phase 2, 3, or final fda approval. You build a scale and you manufacture product now at risk with that kind of investment. That is what enables us to fairly dramatically reduce the estimated timelines. So what have we done . We have four Major Investments that we have made in vaccine candidates. We have the modernity vaccine that came out of dr. Faucis lab originally. It is an mrna that form platform vaccine. We have an antivirus vaccine candidate. Is also anhich antivirus platform candidate. And we recently announced a one point 6 billion additional investment of a novavax protein vaccine. We now have major bets in all three of the major potential platforms of vaccine. With each of them, we will drive towards manufacturing to have tens of millions of doses by this fall and hundreds of millions into next year. Phase two and three Clinical Trials will be beginning later this month, probably. Steve do you think its important to communicate to the public more of what you just said . That there is some risk in this that you could invest so much in one because that is what we need to do today, but one of these vaccine candidates or others might be flops . Mr. Azar we have and we will continue to do so. We are placing multiple investments across a portfolio and we are not done. We know that it is science. It is biopharmaceutical development. Not everything will necessarily hit. That is why we place the investments. The same country that does the apollo project can radically change the speed of a vaccine given the urgency. Justve spent 3 trillion in governments building connected to coronavirus, not even considering the economic impact. A vaccine isr almost infinite in terms of the investment that you would make. Steve i want to move in a moment to the Broader Health care ecosystem. That is what we are talking about today. Not everything is covid. There are other pieces of the puzzle that i would love to get your insight. I would like to ask about the manufacturing side and the researchbased of this. It is not just an american problem. It is a global problem. Some firms have Global Manufacturing deals. How does america position itself so that it gets vaccines developed and produced here, but doesnt give the finger to the rest of the world . How do you manage the international science, production, and global need . Mr. Azar linda give you the astrazeneca platform. They took the oxford vaccine and astrazeneca has the Development Rights in most of the world that they contracted with oxford four. What we have done his contract with research and development to work with the United States of Clinical Trials. In theo manufacturing United States. I think they have talked about several billion doses to be manufactured in india and elsewhere. We dont stand in the way of that. We encourage that. We are investing in u. S. Manufacturing and u. S. Finish capacity so that we are not dependent on any movement of product across borders from outside the United States. But in no way would we do anything to preclude development for the rest of the world. We coordinate closely with the gseven, the european union. Theew witty is leading accelerator project. We are all working towards a common goal. Steve and because of current tensions, are we putting a fence around china right now and leaving china out of this puzzle . Mr. Azar china is not a participant in the act accelerator project and we are not collaborating with them in any direct way on our vaccine or therapeutic manufacturing. Doing theirey are own thing. It we are working in collaboration with the world as i just mentioned. One of the other dimensions we are looking at is the broader state of health care in america. There are a lot of moving pieces to that and people look for silver bullets. The Trump Administration has wanted to replace obamacare with something. How have you been managing that . Is there an alternative you have been working on as you look at how we provide Health Care Insurance and an alternative to obamacare . Mr. Azar steve, you said something really interesting. You referred to silver bullets in health care. What we have learned as part of the experience with the promises that failed with obama care is the American People with health care, they dont really like utopian visions. Most people when it comes to their health care are actually relatively happy with what they have and they dont want that taken away. They would like to see continued , butmental improvement they dont want their relationships with their hospitals or relationships with doctors, they dont want those taken away. How do we deliver more choice and more options for people in the individual market . Cost and deliver lower ending Surprise Medical Bills . How do we deliver Better Health by tackling some of the real discrete and impeccable Health Challenges like ending the hiv aids epidemic, solving the health care crisis, solving the mortality crisis. Ending the opioid epidemic. Renalsing and tackling disease. E look at health care instead of only thinking about the important issues, but the more limited issues of the 10 million in the individual market , we will be a ready and willing partner for congress. One of the big zinger items, i largely agree with you that most people want to keep what theyve got. Most of those are not covered. In my view, there have been different moments where you read to different things. They are committed to maintaining coverage of existing conditions. Mr. Azar it is a statute and hit by that preexisting conditions are covered. We add to that the commitment that people with preexisting conditions will have access to Affordable Health care financing options. And so that commitment is there. It hasre, while insurance for individuals with preexisting conditions, it is not always an affordable solution for them. Weve got to stop talking about this as if we are living in the milk land of milk and honey with obamacare. If you are a couple that makes 70,000 a year in your living in nebraska and you are having to spend 38,000 a year on premiums and 12,000 in deductibles and you have preexisting conditions, that is not actual Affordable Health care financing for you. We do believe there are ways to approach this working with congress. We believe there are proven mechanisms. One of the fatal conceit of obamacare was that you will make the Healthy People in the individual market pay more, excessively more, to fund affordable insurance for the less Healthy People in that same individual market. We believe in the protection and the Affordable Access for people with preexisting conditions. But we think of that as a societal obligation to help them. We will work with congress if the time comes to find solutions that help those people get real insurance, real affordable insurance, allow them to have the coverage they need while allowing Healthy People, those that dont have preexisting conditions, have insurance that meets their needs at the cost that they need also. I dont know what its like during your time of covid. My life has moved to zoom and to skype, the digital platforms. Health care is there. We have the ceo of tele doc joining us in a bit. I think theres a lot of nervousness out there among some people that have been getting health through new media, new mediums. They are getting coverage through things you have laid out. But there is a worry that that will fall back. How much of this new world we , healthered into consultations and Health Online is going to remain and remain paid for under our system after some point, god willing, the covid area era. Mr. Azar this pandemic has led to a lot of innovation in health care through the president upon leadership, the National Emergency authority to be able to waive some of the embedded kept aments that have 1960s style of delivery. We have been able to break through that with the regulation. Telehealth is something we wanted to do for so long, but congress has been unable to change the act to make medicare and medicaid available for telehealth. I have been traveling all over the country. I visit with doctors and hospitals and nursing homes. I think we would have a revolution if anybody tried to go back on this. It has changed the nature of delivery and has brought us uptodate. We will do everything we can by regulation to keep the gains center and in the work with congress to get statutory changes as needed to make sure that we keep whatever is required by statute. Steve final question. Dr. Fauci this morning was blowing the whistle as loudly as he could, worried about what is happening in certain states in the country. That a lot of folks need to take this a lot more seriously. How worried are you that america is not getting this right and we are going the wrong direction on covid . Mr. Azar what we are experiencing in the southeast and southwest, seeing emergence is a very Serious Public Health situation. It often is phrased as a question of reopening. It we dont believe it is about the fact of reopening in terms of a legal or regulatory structure. Rather, how are we behaving within that context . Are we practicing social distancing . Are we wearing facial coverings in circumstances where we cant serve show social distance . We have to take individual responsibility in the construct of reopening work, school, and Health Care Systems again. It is definitely the feedback we are getting on the ground. That is why we have been acting with good individual responsibility here. Steve mr. Secretary, great to see you, even virtually. Good luck with the challenges ahead. Mr. Azar good to be with all of you. Cspans washington journal. Every day, we are taking your calls live on the air for the news of the day. And we will discuss policy issues that impact you. Coming up saturday morning, two president ial contenders from thirdparties. Party platforms and strategies for competing in this years president ial election. Watch cspans washington journal live at 7 00 eastern on saturday morning. With phone calls, facebook comments, and tweaks. Tweets. American history tv on cspan3, telling the american story every weekend. At 2 00kend, saturday p. M. Eastern on oral history, an interview with civil rights withist covering his time howard university. Serving the secretarygeneral of the 1974 panafrican conference. Then on railamerica, the 1963 nbc news report, the American Revolution of 63. A program on the status of the Civil Rights Movement with protests from albany, georgia, birmingham, alabama, cambridge, maryland, and cities like inglewood, new jersey, chicago, and more. Congress,on on political parties, and polarizations. And at 8 00 p. M. On the presidency, author andrew talks june his book two days in. Two days that defied jfks response to the cuban missile crisis and the arms race. American history tv this weekend on cspan3. Book tv on cspan two has nonfiction books and authors every weekend. , authorp this weekend and former College President and political commentator Dinesh Desousa examines what he calls the new face of socialism in the United States and whether it is becoming part of our political culture in his book United States of socialism. He is interviewed by benjamin powell. Then dr. Ezekiel emanuel, former special advisor on Health Policy during the obama administration, discussing his book, which country has the worlds best health care . Thats on cspan two this weekend. President trump participated in a roundtable discussion today in florida on supporting t

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