|
Bettawrekonize -> RE: The FDA and health (3/7/2009 2:49:11 AM)
|
More on BPA quote:
The six largest manufacturers of baby bottles will stop selling bottles in the United States made with bisphenol A ... The manufacturers declared their intentions after Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, joined by the attorneys general in Connecticut and New Jersey, wrote to the bottle makers and asked them to voluntarily stop using the chemical. No BPA For Baby Bottles In U.S. Also found this interesting quote:
WASHINGTON -- The recent approval of a new device to treat knee injuries followed a lobbying campaign that overcame repeated rejections by scientists within the Food and Drug Administration, agency documents show. ... Some senior FDA staff members complained in documents that the handling of Menaflex, made by ReGen Biologics Inc., shows how political and industry pressure can influence scientific conclusions. ... In one instance, emails show the FDA's integrity office excising language from a draft letter an FDA lawyer said would "document special treatment for ReGen." ... Dr. Mabrey also says, "In retrospect, I think they [the FDA] were stacking the committee to get the decision the company wanted." Political Lobbying Drove FDA Process The following is regarding my last post (post 116) about, "Doctors try to silence negative reviews from patients" Someone (Pont) made a very good point on that site, quote:
You ignore the very special circumstance that doctors are in: patients can say anything they want, but doctors can't respond to a review without breaking confidentiality rules and risking their medical license. This is actually a very good point (and for some reason I overlooked it). If patients should have the freedom to criticize doctors, doctors should have the freedom to defend themselves. Freedom of speech should go both ways. A complicated system could be that doctors give patients patient numbers. When a patient complains about a doctor online, they have to state their patient number so the doctor can look up the patient. Then, without revealing the identity of the patient, the doctor can defend himself. The law should hold that once a patient publicly complains about a doctor, confidentiality rules do not apply only to the extent needed for the doctor to defend himself (ie: doctors can't unnecessarily reveal personal information just to retaliate. The information they reveal must be part of their defense). quote:
Mr. Zerden’s minor stir four years ago has lately grown into a full-blown movement by more than 200 Harvard Medical School students and sympathetic faculty, intent on exposing and curtailing the industry influence in their classrooms and laboratories, as well as in Harvard’s 17 affiliated teaching hospitals and institutes. ... The students argue, for example, that Harvard should be embarrassed by the F grade it recently received from the American Medical Student Association, a national group that rates how well medical schools monitor and control drug industry money. Harvard Medical School in Ethics Quandary (originally found on naturalnews). The new Dean at Harvard really has a very tough situation on his hands (read the article for more details). While I do sympathize with him, I also think it's very important for all conflicts of interest among teachers and industry to be disclosed to students (this should be mandatory with strict punishment for those who don't comply). I found this suspicious. quote:
Of Harvard's 8,900 professors and lecturers, 1,600 admit that either they or a family member have had some kind of business link to drug companies — sometimes worth hundreds of thousands of dollars — that could bias their teaching or research. Additionally, pharma contributed more than $11.5 million to the school last year for research and continuing-education classes. The Times covered these details in its stories and included the ... fact that during the November demonstration, a Pfizer employee was on campus photographing protesters with a cell-phone camera. Is Drug-Company Money Tainting Medical Education? (link originally found on naturalnews).
|
|
|
|