The bill, called the “Advancing Precision Medicine Act of 2016,” suggests developing networks of scientists to carry out the mission of the Precision Medicine Initiative, develop new approaches for addressing related issues and any other activities HHS deems appropriate to make headways in the initiative.
Additionally, the bill suggests HHS coordinates with the Secretary of Energy and the private industry to discuss the “advanced supercomputing needs” required by the initiative.
While these objectives have been established in relation to the Precision Medicine Initiative, the bill seeks to move the industry forward on its goals.
More articles on precision medicine:
Precision medicine market set to reach $88B by 2022: 4 things to know
What advances in genomic research mean for federal health IT
Study: Researchers still have genetic code-cracking to do before precision medicine takes off
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