Health

We can't afford to have Washington bureaucrats and the federal government dictating individual health care needs. Our health care system is failing patients across the country. Hardworking families struggle to pay their medical bills. Congress must act to alleviate this pain and stress by putting patients and doctors at the forefront of the decision-making process which will help drive down costs, improve quality, and create more accessible and affordable health care options for families.
The COVID-19 pandemic has increased the need for mental health care. I am holding public forums, bringing additional federal mental health resources to states, and partnering with health care professionals, teachers, and parents to meet the needs of our community.
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WASHINGTON, DC — Today, Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) sent a letter to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) inquiring when the agency will release final data for suicide rates among children in 2021.
The office of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil is accepting nominations for health care workers to be considered for the First Congressional District’s Health Care Worker of the Year Award, according to a news release.
Steil’s office is looking to recognize an “unsung hero” who has gone above and beyond to care for Wisconsin families.
Our doctors, nurses, and health care providers have continued to provide our community with the utmost care and compassion,” Steil said in the release. “It’s important to thank and recognize our healthcare workers for the services they provide. I look forward to recognizing this year’s heroes.”
The award winner will be selected based on this criteria:
- Displaying exemplary service and performance on the job.
- Upholding the standard of providing unsurpassed care and treatment for patients.
- Going above and beyond the call of duty.
- Displaying self-sacrifice and selflessness in caring for others.
Nominees must live in the First District and be a licensed health care professional (they can work at a facility outside the district).
To nominate a health care worker for the award, go to steil.house.gov/health care-worker-award
The office of U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil is accepting nominations for health care workers to be considered for the First Congressional District’s Health Care Worker of the Year Award, according to a news release.
Steil’s office is looking to recognize an “unsung hero” who has gone above and beyond to care for Wisconsin families.
Our doctors, nurses, and health care providers have continued to provide our community with the utmost care and compassion,” Steil said in the release. “It’s important to thank and recognize our healthcare workers for the services they provide. I look forward to recognizing this year’s heroes.”
The award winner will be selected based on this criteria:
- Displaying exemplary service and performance on the job.
- Upholding the standard of providing unsurpassed care and treatment for patients.
- Going above and beyond the call of duty.
- Displaying self-sacrifice and selflessness in caring for others.
Nominees must live in the First District and be a licensed health care professional (they can work at a facility outside the district).
To nominate a health care worker for the award, go to steil.house.gov/health care-worker-award
WASHINGTON, DC— Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) is now accepting submissions for the Wisconsin’s First Congressional District’s Health Care Worker of the Year Award. This award recognizes an unsung hero in our community who has gone above and beyond to care for Wisconsin families.
There’s bipartisan interest in tackling the surging prices of prescription drugs before the midterm elections, but lawmakers are divided on how much action the federal government should take in curbing those rising costs.
Gov. Tony Evers passed a bill last year that requires pharmacists to be more transparent around medication costs
The need for federal help is there, according to Yolanda Tolson-Eveans, pharmacist in charge at St. Vincent de Paul Charitable Pharmacy.
“The surges in the cost of living in general, with gas prices and everything going on, she said. “People have to make difficult choices.”
She has been looking for ways to make those choices easier. The Madison-based pharmacist served on a task force created by Gov. Tony Evers three years ago to investigate solutions to addressing the issue of skyrocketing medication costs. That panel led to a law the governor signed last year, requiring more transparency in prescription drug pricing.
“I think that our group, in a small way, kind of proves that this is actually something that could be extended to a larger focus for the country at large,” Tolson-Eveans said.
Congressman Bryan Steil, R-Janesville agreed. He rolled out legislation requiring price tags on medication commercials.
“Sometimes seniors, in particular, have a difficult time identifying is there a generic or less expensive alternative that would work just as well,” he said. “And so working with my colleagues on across the aisle, we've come together to say 'let's have transparency, in particular, as it relates to prescription drugs and the advertisements we see every day on tv.’”
On the other side of Capitol Hill, Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wisconsin is eyeing a crackdown on price gouging during the pandemic on everything from drugs to gasoline. She’s pushing a bill that would require companies to disclose any changes to costs and allow state attorneys general to enforce standards against excessive pricing.
“This legislation will shine a light on price hikes and help prevent big corporations from exploiting a period of inflation to gouge consumers with higher costs,” she wrote in a statement.
Tolson-Eveans said those two measures would be a long overdue start.
“As a pharmacist, we are seeing the prices every day as we process claims for patients," she said. "And for folks that don't have insurance, we're seeing the cash price, so we see that direct impact. I think for providers and other folks that are kind of further away from the actual dispensing of the medication, sometimes you can lose sight of that.”
Lawmakers just have to agree on where to start. Rep. Steil said he’s not in favor of the recent bills Democrats have been floating around capping the cost of insulin and allowing medicare to negotiate drug prices.
“When the government controls price, the price actually rises and quality comes down,” Rep. Steil said. “I do think though, in the bill that I've put forward in a bipartisan way, one of the things we can work on is transparency.”
Ripon Advance
U.S. Reps. Bryan Steil (R-WI) and Don Bacon (R-NE) cosponsored bipartisan legislation on April 14 that would spotlight high prescription drug prices by requiring pharmaceutical companies to disclose the list prices of medication in TV advertisements.
WASHINGTON, DC – Today Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) introduced the Plain Prescription Prices Act with Reps. Nikema Williams (GA-05), Don Bacon (NE-02), and Angie Craig (MN-02).
WASHINGTON, DC -Today, Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) led a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra regarding the nationwide shortage of monoclonal antibody treatments.
WASHINGTON, D.C.—Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) joined CBS 58 last night to discuss recent reports that the State of Wisconsin underreported nearly 1,000 COVID deaths in long-term care facilities.
JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN—Congressman Bryan Steil (WI-01) received a response from Wisconsin Governor Tony Evers regarding information on the State of Wisconsin's COVID-19 vaccination plan.