January 28, 2009The FDA Isn't Listening To President Obama On OpennessI was pleased last week when President Barack Obama pledged to make the federal government more open, accountable and transparent to the American people. But, sadly, that message seems to be lost on one of the most opaque, we-work-for-industry-not-the-public agencies of them all, the FDA. For example, in December I contacted an agency press officer because news had just come out that the FDA had caught AstraZeneca engaging in what the agency deemed off-label marketing of Seroquel, an atypical antipsychotic, for depression, a condition for which the drug is not approved. I asked the FDA to tell me what range of penalties and sanctions the company could face for engaging in such conduct. I was trying to provide readers with some context for understanding what penalties were possible. I was given the usual FDA response of "I'll look into this and get back you." Days passed and I queried the agency again, after receiving no further reply. This time, I got no reply whatsoever. Yesterday, I renewed my request of the agency in conjunction with questions about the FDA now requiring AZ to update its label on the drug to warn the public and doctors about the likelihood of significant weight gain on the drug. I asked the fDA to provide me with a copy of whatever communique it had sent AZ so that I could include it in what I planned to write for today about the weight gain warning. No answer. This whole stall-and-don't-answer business with the FDA is, of course, legendary and I am sick of it. The agency approves drugs with limited efficacy, then allows Big Pharma to hide negative data about the same drugs. The agency creates its own diagnoses of psychiatric disorders, even running counter to scientific disputes as it did with pediatric bipolar disorder last year, while one of its officials was entangled in helping academics and industry create the definition for that disorder and the same official would then later sit in judgement of drugs submitted for approval for that disorder--and then the agency won't answer questions about how that official was involved in the process to begin with (seriously, I've tried to get answers and get no response). Heck, those are just a few examples of the FDA's paranoid secretiveness. I'm sure there are many other examples in the drug and device side as well as on the food safety side of the FDA. I know there are a number of federal agencies that are closed-off and secretive and which need to be forced into the sunshine, but I can think of no better place for the White House to begin pressing its new openness dictates than upon the FDA. After all, it's now a Presidential directive that the agency tell the public what's up. Posted by Philip Dawdy at January 28, 2009 12:05 AM
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You are absolutely 100% correct. So far, the GAO has named the FDA one of the top three "at risk" agencies in the federal govt. We will see what that does. Three (I think three) scientists currently working in the device section have come forward publically. Rep. Stupak wrote a very public letter saying the joint required TOTAL overhaul. And a number of us have written to Obama's website, now Whitehouse.org, to talk of the scandalous nature of the place - still filled with hateful pharma lovers. Apparently, the doc who is head of Baltimore Public Health was sent over there by Obama's people to check it out, having heard such bad press, and I believe is still a candidate to run the place. Pharma wants Janet Woodcock, who has been there forever and is malleable to what Pharm wants. I advise going to Obama's website and raising a STINK. p.s. Read the Rolling Stone Zyprexa piece sitting in Borders with a stony face. Knew most of the facts and was disappointed that you got no credt. But I was also disappointed that there was NO human interest in the story. NONE. I bought it, but should have saved my $4.95. What kind of story is it if there is no mention of the life, or death, of an individual KILLED. Posted by: Sorrowful at January 28, 2009 02:49 AMThe FDA should not 'ask' or 'request' anything from the pharma industry they are obligated to regulate. They need and we should demand the FDA take an authoriatarian stace regarding their regulatory process: The Conversion of Our Protector The Food and Drug Administration originated in its primitive form several decades ago to ensure the health and safety of the citizens of the United States in regards to what they consume that is provided to them by manufacturers for their intake. The one person who became the catalyst for the formation of the Food and Drug Administration was a socialist named Upton Sinclair, who was a writer. One particular book, while fictional, addressed the working conditions in a meat packaging company that were quite shockingly described by Upton in this book. While the author intended with composing this book, “The Jungle”, to address and focus for the benefit of the readers his paradigm regarding capitalism, the issue in his book regarding food safety is what caught the attention of the public, including the president, who was involved with the development of the Food and Drug Administration soon afterwards. Yeah, it's time to write, write, write to various people: GAO, Grassley, Stupak, that Baltimore PH guy, anyone who sounds remotely interested in public health and safety. I can see at least two of this posting's paragraphs suitable for some quick-and-dirty cutting and pasting. Keep it simple. Better to send many postcards than one belated tome. And you have lots of paragraphs suitable for postcards on your site. You've really already done the writing part. Sherry Posted by: Sherry at January 28, 2009 08:10 AM"Pledged" with be the extent of Obama's "openess"...such as no more lobbyists in his administration...on the same day, I think, he appointed a former lobbyist for Raytheon to be asst sec for defense...or the "openess" of his campaign finances...which was never open to audit after changing his mind about "public money"...Obama will set new standards for arrogance and hubris...guaranteed Posted by: richard coughlin at January 28, 2009 08:58 AMAn example of Obama's "openess"...now what in the world does this have to do with stimulating the economy? "ACORN, the low-income advocacy group under investigation for voter registration fraud, could be eligible for billions in aid from the economic stimulus proposal working its way through the House. " Opensecrets has Obama's pharma contributions here: It is a continuing disappointment that the FDA so willingly accepts short term studies of products that are intended to be used in the long term. Who among us has taken a psychotropic for just six weeks? Moreover, it is time that the FDA stopped relying exclusively on comparisons of psych meds to placebos and appreciated that a statistically significant yet small effect size can be offset by short and long term side effects. The FDA failed mental health consumers miserably when it took CATIE, CUTLASS, and other studies to determine that SGAs on the whole were not "safer and more effective" then FGAs as had long been represented. FDA approval no longer means what we might and should expect. Post a comment
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