'Consensus Statement' Fails To Capture Attention In Washington, D.C.

At the same time, he and other framers of the statement say they are gratified that so many diverse and prestigious organizations have put their support behind the effort. "I guess I had hoped that more congressional offices and more parts of the [Clinton] administration would have taken note of the breadth of the constituents that had thought it important to prepare a statement," says Leon Rosenberg, president of the Bristol-Myers

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At the same time, he and other framers of the statement say they are gratified that so many diverse and prestigious organizations have put their support behind the effort.

"I guess I had hoped that more congressional offices and more parts of the [Clinton] administration would have taken note of the breadth of the constituents that had thought it important to prepare a statement," says Leon Rosenberg, president of the Bristol-Myers Squibb Pharmaceutical Research Institute in Princeton, N.J. Rosenberg chaired the March 9 meeting sponsored by Research!America, an Alexandria, Va.-based research-advocacy organization, at which the declaration was conceived.

The document begins with the assertion that "too many Americans are suffering and dying needlessly because, as a nation, we don't invest enough in medical research." It concludes with recommendations, including calls to "incorporate the promotion of medical research as an integral element of health-care reform" and "encourage, do not obstruct, the ...

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