Thursday, January 22, 2009

8 years in 8 minutes

Lest we forget...The former administration was criminal, left us in this mess, and should be tried by international tribunal. Thanks to Keith Olbermann and his producer Jonathan Larsen for this, also to Daily Kos and firedoglake.

Friday, January 09, 2009

Hopefully, change will come to the FDA

FDA Scientists Complain to Obama of "Corruption"

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by: Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar, The Associated Press

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Federal scientists from the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) Center for Devices and Radiological Health have sent a letter to the Obama transition team reporting FDA managerial corruption and manipulation of the scientific review process for medical devices - placing the American public at risk. (Photo: Kasuga Huang)

    Washington - In an unusually blunt letter, a group of federal scientists is complaining to the Obama transition team of widespread managerial misconduct in a division of the Food and Drug Administration.

    "The purpose of this letter is to inform you that the scientific review process for medical devices at the FDA has been corrupted and distorted by current FDA managers, thereby placing the American people at risk," said the letter, dated Wednesday and written on the agency's Center for Devices and Radiological Health letterhead.

    The center is responsible for medical devices ranging from stents and breast implants to MRIs and other imaging machinery. The concerns of the nine scientists who wrote to the transition team echo some of the complaints from the FDA's drug review division a few years ago during the safety debacle involving the painkiller Vioxx.

    The FDA declined to publicly respond to the letter, but said it is working to address the concerns.

    In their letter the FDA dissidents alleged that agency managers use intimidation to squelch scientific debate, leading to the approval of medical devices whose effectiveness is questionable and which may not be entirely safe.

    "Managers with incompatible, discordant and irrelevant scientific and clinical expertise in devices...have ignored serious safety and effectiveness concerns of FDA experts," the letter said. "Managers have ordered, intimidated and coerced FDA experts to modify scientific evaluations, conclusions and recommendations in violation of the laws, rules and regulations, and to accept clinical and technical data that is not scientifically valid."

    A copy of the letter, with the names of the scientists redacted, was provided to The Associated Press by a congressional official.

    "Currently, there is an atmosphere at FDA in which the honest employee fears the dishonest employee, and not the other way around," the scientists wrote.

    FDA spokeswoman Judy Leon said in response: "We have been working very closely with members of the transition team and any concerns or questions they have on any issue, we will address directly with the team. Separately, the agency is actively engaged in a process to explore the staff members' concerns and take appropriate action."

    Senior Democratic and Republican lawmakers are urging Obama to appoint a commissioner who will shake up the FDA and restore the confidence of its working-level scientists and medical experts. But industry officials fear that approval of new drugs and devices could be delayed by endless scientific disputes - which is the agency's reputation.

    The FDA dissidents have previously taken their concerns to Congress and found support from lawmakers in the House.

    In the letter the group singled out mammography computer-aided detection devices as an example of a technology that should not have gone forward. The devices were supposed to improve breast cancer detection, but instead studies showed they were associated with false alarms that led to unnecessary breast biopsies.

    Since 2006, FDA experts have recommended five times against approving the devices without better clinical evidence, the letter said. In March of last year, a panel of outside advisers supported some of the concerns of the FDA's in-house scientists. Nonetheless, FDA managers overruled the objections and ordered approval.

    Top FDA managers "committed the most outrageous misconduct by ordering, coercing and intimidating FDA physicians and scientists to recommend approval, and then retaliating when the physicians and scientists refused to go along," the letter said.

    A spokeswoman said the Obama transition team had no comment.

11:38 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this | Tags: fda, transition

Thursday, January 08, 2009

Happy New Year... I'm baa-ack.

Thanks to Truthout

Democrats: Ignored IG Advice Could Have Saved $25 Billion

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by: David Goldstein, McClatchy Newspapers

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Rep. Henry Waxman leaves a meeting of the House Democratic Caucus in November. Waxman, along with Rep. Edolphus Towns and Sen. Claire McCaskill, chastised the Bush administration for ignoring cost-saving advice from watchdogs. (Gerald Herbert / AP)

    Washington - Some congressional Democrats claim that the Bush administration could have saved more than $25 billion since 2001 if it had implemented nearly 14,000 cost-saving measures that its own watchdogs recommended.

    The recommendations came from inspectors general in various federal agencies. By law, federal agencies are supposed to act on inspector general reports within a year.

    The findings are in a report prepared by Democrats on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee. It also said that in addition to saving taxpayers' money, many of the recommendations would have improved public health and safety, national and homeland security and the environment.

    The committee asked the inspectors general to compile all the recommendations they'd made between Jan. 1, 2001, and the end of last year. The total was nearly 100,000, with 14 percent of them unimplemented.

    "If someone told me that I was losing change from a hole in my pocket and instead of mending it I kept losing money, shame on me," Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., said in a statement. "But that's what has happened . . . to the tune of $25 billion, as thousands of inspectors general recommendations were ignored by our government."

    She and Democratic Reps. Henry Waxman of California and Edolphus Towns of New York had asked the committee to look at the unimplemented recommendations.

    Waxman was the chairman of the committee at the time. Towns is the new chairman. McCaskill serves on a similar panel in the Senate, the Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

    The House committee's ranking Republican, Rep. Darrell Issa of California, chided the Democrats for conducting the study without any Republican input.

    In a statement, Issa also said that the report ignored the Democrats' "own backyard" because it didn't look at inspectors general recommendations made during the Clinton administration.

    Issa's spokesman, Frederick Hill, said there could be good reasons that some recommendations had been delayed, but "anytime the IG says there's a problem, it's important that Congress should take it seriously."

    The report indicated that putting in place the open IG recommendations for just the Social Security Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services would save more than $16 billion.

    Another $3 billion could be saved from the unimplemented recommendations by the inspectors generals of the Transportation and Defense departments.

    A specific recommendation in 2007 was for the Defense Department to identify overpayments to certain military contractors, which could save $837 million over five years, according to the report.

    The Amtrak inspector general said in 2005 that the agency could save $100 million annually by using a more modern system of maintenance.

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