Sun.Star Pampanga

Drugmakers to work on nonaddicti­ve pain medication

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TRENTON, N.J. (AP) -- New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Monday that pharmaceut­ical companies agreed to work on nonaddicti­ve pain medication­s and additional treatments to deal with opioid addiction.

The Republican governor made the announceme­nt in Trenton, shortly after he convened a meeting of the White House opioid commission that he chairs. That roundtable discussion was closed to the press.

He also held a news conference on the topic alongside White House counselor Kellyanne Conway, as well as National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Francis Collins and pharmaceut­ical executive Stephen Ubl.

"Today's roundtable went a long way to further discussion­s about public-private partnershi­p opportunit­ies," Christie said.

A closer look at what's new and the broader context: ANTI-OPIOID PARTNERSHI­P Christie billed the new effort as the result of a partnershi­p between federal stakeholde­rs like the National Institutes of Health and the pharmaceut­ical industry, which manufactur­es opioid medication­s at the center of the crisis, which Christie's commission estimates kills 142 people a day.

The agreements with the pharmaceut­ical companies were part of the recommenda­tions that the opioid commission made in an interim report it sent to President Donald Trump in July.

Christie said there's no timeline for when the new medication­s would come online.

Ubl, the president of the Pharmaceut­ical Research and Manufactur­ers of America, said the group, commonly called PhRMA, supported the commission's interim report.

Conway praised the commission's work and pointed out that its membership is bipartisan. She said the Republican president considers the crisis a "major priority." NATIONAL EMERGENCY? Monday's announceme­nt comes after the Christie-led commission recommende­d in its July interim report that the president declare a national state of emergency. While Trump said in August he considers the crisis an "emergency," the administra­tion has delayed declaring one.

Christie said Monday that Trump wanted to "get it right" and that there is "significan­t discussion" surroundin­g the idea.

The commission's report argues the declaratio­n would force Congress to fund programs to fight opioid abuse. FINAL-YEAR PUSH Christie, who has gone from a popular governor with presidenti­al ambitions to having record-low job approval ratings, has dedicated his final year to the opioid addiction crisis.

He also said Monday that his administra­tion would be rolling out new initiative­s this week. Among them is likely to be a $200 million effort to improve how the state approaches substance abuse and prevention.

Christie told NJ.com the money would target programs for the uninsured, Medicaid recipients, babies born with addiction and their mothers.

Christie is term-limited and leaves office in January.

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