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SENATE PASSES HISTORIC VOTE
WASHINGTON, DC (January 7, 2010) — The
United States Senate, in a historic Christmas Eve vote, passed the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2009 (H.R. 3590). The Women's Health Office Act (WHOA), SWHR’s signature piece of legislation,
was included as a provision in the health reform bill, marking a tremendous
accomplishment for women’s health and women's health research and an advancement
of SWHR’s advocacy work.
WHOA cosponsors Senators Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) and Olympia Snowe (R-ME) fought
to have WHOA maintained as a provision in the Senate health reform bill during
its negotiation process. In the House of Representatives, WHOA cosponsors
Representatives Carolyn Maloney (D-NY) and Chris Murphy (D-CT) successfully
inserted it into the House bill (H.R. 3962), which passed on November 7, 2009.
“For too many years, women’s health care needs were neglected or poorly
understood, and in many cases women were not included in critical health
research and studies. Enactment of the Women’s Health Office Act as part
of greater health care reform will ensure that women’s needs and gaps in
research, policy, programs, education, and training in women’s health will
continue to receive the attention they require in the 21st century. I
applaud Senator Mikulski, Senator Snowe and Congressman Murphy for their work
on this very important issue,” said Rep. Maloney (NY-14). Rep. Murphy echoed that
sentiment, "President Obama's administration is providing more leadership
on women's health than we have seen for the last eight years. And we have
an opportunity, in this health reform effort, to work with him to ensure that
volumes of research and information on women's health don't disappear simply
because we didn't protect it. The Senate’s action takes us one step
closer to making this a reality.”
Women's health offices within
federal agencies (e.g., FDA, SAMSHA, NIH, CDC) exist to increase public education
awareness campaigns, clinical studies and research for and about women's
health. Without adequate funding and staff provided by federal protection,
these offices remain vulnerable to elimination due to insufficient funding and
staffing resources. If these offices were eliminated women would lose key
resources, tools and/or information to make informed health care decisions.
WHOA will ensure the federal protections that the offices need to fulfill their
missions.
The House and Senate are
currently negotiating differences between the two bills and will create a final
bill that will be submitted to President Obama for his approval.
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For more information on Society for Women’s
Health Research please contact Syieda Penn
at 202-496-5001 or Syieda@womenshealthresearch.org.
The Society for
Women’s Health Research (SWHR), a national non-profit organization based in Washington D.C.,
is widely recognized as the thought leader in women’s health research. SWHR’s
mission is to improve the health of all women through advocacy, education and
research. Visit SWHR’s website at www.womenshealthresearch.org
for more information.
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