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Dear %FirstName%,
Below is a rather extensive research article on the FDA and all the corruption involved with it and the drug companies, scientists, etc. Please contact your congressman or representative on this issue to help all those innocent victims.
Lawmakers
Say FDA Better Clean Up Its Act
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by Evelyn
Pringle |
http://www.opednews.com
For six years, the Bush administration
has placed pharmaceutical industry interests ahead of public interest by
appointing persons with strong ties to drug companies to high level positions at
the FDA, and as a result, Congressional investigations and a recent survey
indicate that the health and safety of all Americans is being compromised.
On July 20, 2006, the Union of Concerned Scientists published the
results of a survey that showed an insidious political influence of science
within the FDA. According to the UCS press release, the survey was co-sponsored
by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER), and was sent to
5,918 FDA scientists.
The survey found that 61% of the responding
scientists knew of cases where the "Department of Health and Human Services or
FDA political appointees have inappropriately injected themselves into FDA
determinations or actions."
In responding to the survey, one scientist
wrote: "Over the last several years I have noticed a significant increase in the
number of decisions that have become politicized (e.g., increasing requests to
review even simple regulations and changes, both by Congress and the
Commissioner's office and to make apparently politically-motivated changes in
language and sometimes to alter bottom line results), and I think the integrity
of scientific work could be improved by minimising the 'politics' of the
process."
Out of the nearly 1000 scientists who responded, close to
one-fifth or 18.4%, said they had "been asked, for non-scientific reasons, to
inappropriately exclude or alter technical information or their conclusions in a
FDA scientific document."
In addition, 40% of the scientists said they
fear retaliation for voicing safety concerns in public and more than one-third
said they did not feel they can express safety concerns even inside the
agency.
The survey also found that only 47% think the "FDA routinely
provides complete and accurate information to the public," and 81% agreed that
the "public would be better served if the independence and authority of FDA
post-market safety systems were strengthened."
In a complaint aimed at
the FDA's Office of Regulatory Affairs, one scientist said it should "not
ostracise scientists or black ball them because their foresight sees a problem
with a drug, device, food, biologics, etc. that possess a potential hazard to
health now or in the future."
In response to the concerns raised by FDA
scientists, the UCS recommends:
– Accountability: FDA leadership must
face consequences if they side with commercial or political interests and not
with the American people.
– Transparency: Scientific research and reviews
should be open so any undue manipulation is immediately apparent.
–
Protection: Safeguards must be put in place for all government scientists who
speak out.
"These disturbing survey results make it clear that
inappropriate interference is putting people in harm's way," said Dr Francesca
Grifo, Senior Scientist and Director of UCS's Scientific Integrity Program, in
the press release.
"All federal scientists," he said, "need protections
so they can speak out when their science is manipulated, and all federal
agencies need fully functioning independent advisory committees."
"FDA
leaders," Dr Grifo noted, "should act now to improve transparency and
accountability and renew respect for independent science at the
agency."
"FDA leadership," he stated, "must understand and support
independent science and it is up to Congress to hold them
accountable."
But nothing about this survey is news to FDA officials. By
use of the FOIA, the UCS and PEER, recently obtained a copy of a previously
unpublished survey by the Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General
from late 2002, that polled 846 FDA scientists, and with nearly half responding
determined that:
Nearly one in five said that they "have been pressured
to approve or recommend approval" for a drug "despite reservations about the
safety, efficacy or quality of the drug"
Two-thirds lacked confidence
that the FDA "adequately monitors the safety of prescription drugs once they are
on the market"
Only 12% of the responding scientists were completely
confident that FDA "labeling decisions adequately address key safety concerns,"
and 30% were not at all or only somewhat confident
More than one-third
were not at all or only somewhat confident that "final decisions adequately
assess the safety of a drug"
Despite the above results, the report
published by the OIG in March 2003, included the conclusion that FDA scientific
reviewers "have high confidence in decisions FDA makes."
On August 8,
2006, the UCS briefed acting FDA Commissioner, Andrew von Eschenbach, on the
latest survey and discussed the political inference at the FDA. To restore
integrity, UCS recommended that Dr von Eschenbach adopt and enforce three basic
commitments:
(1) to ensure that data or results are never softened for
any audience. Rigorous scientific debate must be valued at the FDA;
(2)
to pledge to support scientists who speak out by taking adverse employment
action against any manager who retaliates against a reviewer; and
(3) to
commit to a culture that supports a collaborative process of testing and
challenging scientific hypotheses.
Along with the recommendations, the
group's August 8, 2006, press release said, "The FDA must allow an open
scientific process and recognize the need for scientists to pose and answer
questions without consequences related to their status at the
FDA."
Critics claim that a major issue that needs to be addressed
involves the rampant conflicts of interest among members of the FDA's advisory
panels who have financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry. In November 2005,
a new law was passed that required members of the committees to disclose all
financial ties to drug companies.
The categories for disclosure were
broken down into dollar amounts and time frames, such as less than $10,000 a
year or between $10,000 and $50,000 a year. After reviewing the financial
disclosure forms, the FDA is permitted to grant waivers that allow experts to
sit on panels even if they have financial ties to a drug company.
However, on April 21, 2006, the Boston Globe discussed the practical
effects of the law since it was enacted and reported that FDA critics "say the
new transparency has changed little, and scientists who have conflicts of
interest can still guide FDA decision making."
In less than 6 months
after the law went into effect, the Globe determined the FDA had granted close
to 100 waivers.
One of the current investigations of the FDA involves
allegations that the agency approved the antibiotic, Ketek, despite serious
questions about the drug's safety and efficacy, and with full knowledge that the
clinical study submitted to support Ketek's approval was fraudulent.
Critics say Ketek's side effects of liver damage were known to its
maker, Sanofi-Aventis, early in clinical trials but were covered up. The drug
has been blamed for the death of four patients and the liver damage or failure
in 37 other patients since 2004.
Internal FDA emails that surfaced
during the investigation show that at least four FDA safety officials, Dr David
Graham, Dr Charles Cooper, Dr David Ross and Dr Rosemary Johann-Liang, had
voiced serious concerns about the safety of the drug.
"I tried to argue
that given Aventis's track record in which they have proven themselves to be
nontrustworthy that we have to consider the possibility that they are
intentionally doing a poor job of collecting the postmarketing data to protect
their drug sales," Dr Cooper said in an email.
"It's as if every
principle governing the review and approval of new drugs was abandoned or
suspended where telithromycin is concerned," Dr David Graham wrote in an email
that recommended Ketek's "immediate withdrawal."
"We don't really know
if the drug works;" he said, "no one is claiming it works better than other,
safer drugs; and we're flying blind as far as safety goes, except for our own
A.D.R. data that suggests telithromycin is uniquely more toxic than most other
drugs."
In May 2006, Dr Johann-Liang called for a halt to tests of Ketek
in children with ear infections, arguing that cutting the duration of ear pain
by one day was hardly worth risking death.
The FDA's actions in regard
to Ketek are being investigated by Senator Charles Grassley's (R-Iowa), Senate
Finance Committee, and by Representatives, Edward Markey of Massachusetts, and
Henry Waxman of California, ranking Democrats on the House Government Reform
Committee.
In May 2006, the lawmakers released a statement that said
although "the FDA has consistently assured the public of Ketek's safety and
efficacy, public documents obtained and examined by Representatives Markey and
Waxman's staff indicate that the approval process for this drug was seriously
flawed."
As Chairman of the Senate Committee, Senate Grassley has called
for a "major overhaul and a culture change at the highest levels" of the FDA. In
a May 1, 2006, press release, he noted concerns over the FDA's complicity with
the drug maker and its subsequent failure to ensure the integrity of a study on
the benefits and risks of Ketek.
The Senator called it "mystifying" on
May 16, 2006, that the FDA would continued to provide information that it knew
was fraudulent, and warned that he planned to keep the pressure on the FDA to
provide more information about Ketek's approval and post-market surveillance.
According to Dr Graham, Ketek is at least as toxic to the liver as three
other drugs that have been pulled off the market and the FDA's original approval
of the drug was based on a study that FDA officials knew was fraudulent.
"It's no surprise to learn that the FDA didn't listen to Dr. Graham on
the dangers of Ketek," Senator Grassley was quick to point out. "The FDA has
made it their business to discredit Dr. Graham and others who aren't willing to
cater to the drug companies," he noted.
In October 2001, doctors began
enrolling subjects for the Ketek clinical trial known as Study 3014, and were
paid $100 for each patient that signed up. The participating doctors would also
receive another $150 when the study results were submitted, and a final $150
when all questions related to the study were resolved, according to the May 1,
2006, Wall Street Journal.
On July 24, 2002, drug maker Aventis submitted
the results of the study to the FDA, but when FDA officials submitted the study
to the advisory committee for review, they did not disclose that the Division of
Scientific Investigation and Office of Criminal Investigation was investigating
the integrity of the study.
The misconduct that took place during the
clinical trials is so serious that critics say it calls the validity of the
entire study into question. For instance, the doctor who signed up the 3rd
highest number of patients, was in a chronic state of cocaine addiction while
conducting the clinical trial, and was arrested and found to have cocaine hidden
in his underwear, while holding his wife hostage with a gun, the same month the
study results were submitted to the FDA.
Another doctor who participated
in the study was totally disqualified as an investigator and prohibited from
conducting any clinical trials in the future, and another who signed up 150
patients was cited for 20 violations of the study's instructions.
Dr
Anne Campbell, the doctor with the highest number of subjects in the study, was
sentenced to nearly 5 years in prison in March 2004, after being charged in a
21-count indictment over her misconduct.
Senator Grassley is demanding a
face-to-face interview with the FDA investigator who discovered the fraud and
misconduct in the trials, who he contends "is key to understanding what the FDA
did when it became clear that the safety study required by the FDA in order to
approve the drug was fraudulent and faulty."
This investigator authored a
March 25, 2004, memorandum from the Division of Scientific Investigations
titled, "DSI Recommendations on Data Integrity," that states in part, that Study
3014 involved "multiple instances of fraud" and that "the integrity of data from
all sites involved in [the] study ... cannot be assured with any degree of
confidence."
After months of trying unsuccessfully to get an interview,
Senator Grassley finally marched right over to the Department of Health and
Human Services headquarters and asserted a congressional right to speak to the
investigator.
After a brief conversation with senior officials, he left
mad as a hornet. "This is extraordinary to me," he said outside HHS
headquarters. "I haven't had to go to an agency like this since 1983 to get
information I requested.
"I smell a cover-up," he stated.
On June
22, 2006, Senator Grassley publicly announced a not too subtle warning to
officials at the agency. "Two years ago I called a congressional hearing to
probe the FDA's handling of the withdrawn painkiller Vioxx," he said in a
statement.
"It might be time," he warned, "to round up another oversight
hearing after the runaround I got recently at the FDA."
"The FDA," he
wrote, "refused to allow me to question an internal investigator who is leading
an inquiry into alleged fraud involved with clinical trials for the antibiotic
Ketek."
"So for only the second time in 23 years," he said, "I
resurrected in June my unconventional means to fulfill my Constitutional
oversight responsibilities."
He said, "I appeared at the FDA's
doorstep," and noted that agency officials refused to let the investigator speak
to him.
However, he warned, "Bureaucratic stonewalling won't deter this
U.S. Senator."
"I won't rest," Senator Grassley said, "until the light
of day exposes what ought to be available for public consumption."
"It
all boils down to keeping the government accountable," he wrote, "to the people
and strengthening the public trust in government."
In another statement
released on June 29, 2006, he stated, "Ketek is another example where the F.D.A.
accommodated a drug maker and turned a blind eye to serious safety
concerns."
Over the past couple of years, the suppression of the
scientific process and the muzzling of scientific dissent at the FDA became
evident first when officials forced Dr Andrew Mosholder to suppress a link he
found between SSRI antidepressants and suicide in children, and Dr Graham went
public with allegations about the FDA's mishandling of the Vioxx
matter.
On March 10, 2005, Senator Grassley gave a speech to the Consumer
Federation of America and said these two whistleblowers had done more to shake
up a complacent FDA than probably anybody in recent history and relayed parts of
the story saying:
"Early last year I heard that the FDA was muzzling one
of its own scientists. In February 2004 the FDA held a meeting to decide whether
there was a link between some antidepressant drugs and suicidal behavior in
kids.
"Dr. Andrew Mosholder – the FDA's expert in this area -- concluded
there was a link. However, FDA management disagreed. So, when Dr. Mosholder
stuck by his findings, his supervisors canceled his presentation to an advisory
committee.
"Instead of allowing Dr. Mosholder to present his findings
publicly and subject them to committee scrutiny, the scientific process and his
peers, the FDA effectively muzzled him."
But despite the FDA's best
efforts, Senator Grassley said, Dr Mosholder wouldn't be silenced and months
later he was proven right.
Citing information from the Department of
Justice, he told the audience that there are currently under seal in the
neighborhood of 100 whistleblower cases involving allegations against over 200
drug companies.
"During the past four years," he stated, "the department
recovered nearly 2 and a half billion dollars from whistleblower cases against
drug companies."
Senator Grassley called Dr Mosholder and Dr Graham great
patriots. "Think about the guts it takes to undermine your career, and to go
against your supervisors at a huge federal agency," he said, "and in this case,
the multi-billion-dollar drug companies."
In an August 30, 2005,
interview with Manette Loudon, the lead investigator for Dr Gary Null, Dr Graham
discussed how FDA officials attempted to suppress the results of his study on
Vioxx a year earlier. According to Dr Graham, prior to his Senate testimony in
mid-November of 2004, there was an orchestrated campaign by senior FDA managers
to intimidate him so that he would not testify about the adverse affects of
Vioxx to Congress.
One attack he says, came when the acting FDA
Commissioner, Lester Crawford, contacted the editor of the Lancet, a UK medical
journal, and told him that Dr Graham had committed scientific misconduct and
that the journal should not publish the paper that he had written showing that
Vioxx increased the risks of heart attack.
The second attack came from
other high level officials, he said, who contacted Senator Grassley's office in
attempt to prevent Senator Grassley from calling him as a witness.
And
the third he says came from senior FDA officials who contacted Tom Devine, Dr
Graham's attorney at the Government Accountability Project, and attempted to
convince him that the GAP should not represent Dr Graham because he was guilty
of scientific misconduct.
According to Dr Graham, these officials posed
as whistleblowers themselves, and told Mr Devine that Dr Graham was a "bully," a
"demigod," and a "terrible person" that could not be trusted.
In one
more last ditch effort to thwart Dr Graham's testimony the week before he
testified, he says, the acting Commissioner offered him a job in the
Commissioner's Office to oversee the revitalization of drug safety if he would
just leave the Office of Drug Safety.
"Obviously he had been tipped
off," Dr Graham said in the interview, "by people in the Senate Finance
Committee who are sympathetic to the FDA's status quo that I was going to be
called as a witness."
To preempt his testimony, he told Ms Loudon, he was
offered a job "which basically would have been exile to a fancy title with no
real ability to have an impact."
According to Dr Graham, by allowing
Vioxx to stay on the market, the FDA is responsible for 140,000 heart attacks
and 60,000 dead Americans. "That's as many people as were killed in the Vietnam
War," he points out.
He says the FDA could have prevented many of the
heart attacks and deaths simply by banning the high dose Vioxx back in 2000 when
the agency learned about the results of the VIGOR Study. "But the FDA did
nothing for almost two years," he states. "They were "negotiating" with the
company over a label."
"The FDA made bad decisions," Dr Graham said,
"based of its culture and its institutionalized biases that favor industry, and
as a result thousands of Americans died."
During a July 18, 2005, speech
on the Senate floor, Senator Grassley proclaimed, "this country's confidence in
the FDA has been shaken."
It has not been shaken, he said, by one
isolated incident or whistleblower. "It has been shaken because multiple drug
safety concerns have been exposed by more than one courageous
whistleblower."
"Dr. Graham's testimony before the Finance Committee," he
told members of Congress, "suggests that the problems are
systemic."
"Oversight of the FDA," Senator Grassley advised, "exposed the
cozy relationship that exists between the FDA and the drug industry."
"It
revealed that the FDA negotiated for almost two years with Merck," he said,
"about how to change the Vioxx label so people would know about the risk of
heart attacks."
According to Dr Graham, the Vioxx disaster would not have
been as severe in the absence of direct-to-consumer advertising. "I submit," he
told Ms Loudon, "that the numbers would have been far lower than what they
were."
Due to heavy marketing of new drugs, Dr Graham says, lots of
patients and doctors will use a new drug that is no better than another drug
already on the market, even though the FDA does not require that new drugs be at
least equivalent to, or better than, the drugs that are already there. All the
drug maker has to prove is that a drug works better than a sugar pill, he says.
Silencing scientists to protect the industry has become habitual under
the current politically appointed rulers of the FDA. According to Shane Ellison,
author of "Health Myths Exposed," pharmaceutically compliant politicians have
"democratized" the drug industry. "This means that drug approval is a matter of
51% telling the other 49% that deadly drugs are safe and necessary," he
reports.
"Science and choice," he warns, "no longer prevail at the FDA or
at pharmaceutical companies."
Mr Ellison is a former pharmaceutical
industry chemist who says he felt a responsibility to reveal the truth about the
industry's sordid tactics after he witnessed first-hand how they deceive the
public, according to a September 3, 2005, interview with Crusador Editor, Greg
Ciola.
"To go against the 51% means losing your career," Ellison said.
"Therefore, the majority of scientists choose to please drug companies, not the
general public."
As an example, Mr Ellison discussed Dr Curt Furberg, a
member of the FDA's drug safety advisory committee. Dr Furberg, he says, came
forward to reveal that Bextra also caused heart attack and stroke. In the
British Medical Journal, Dr Furberg said that his studies showed Bextra to be no
different than Vioxx, and warned that Pfizer was trying to suppress that
information.
"Immediately thereafter," Mr Ellison said, "Dr. Furberg was
barred from serving on the panel that is responsible for considering the safety
of cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX 2) inhibitors."
"The end result being more
votes in favor of COX 2 inhibitors, the drug company wins by votes – not
science," Mr Ellison told Crusador.
In the case of the pain relieving
Cox-2 inhibitors, the FDA's advisory committee was stacked with experts with
ties to the drug makers. Of the 32 advisers who would vote on the drugs, it has
since become known that 10 of panel members had consulted in recent years for
Vioxx maker, Merck, or Pfizer who made Celebrex and Bextra.
While the
committee voted unanimously that all of the drugs significantly increased the
risk of heart attack and stroke, in a 17-15 vote the panel said the FDA should
allow Vioxx to remain on the market. A tally of the votes showed that without
the 9 votes of the 10 members who consulted for the drug makers, the committee
would have voted 14 to 8 to ban Vioxx.
However, the panel's
recommendation was met with scorn and outrage by medical experts and researchers
alike in the media, and in a rare occurrence, the FDA went against the
recommendation of its advisory panel and refused to allow Vioxx to remain on the
market.
Critics also accuse the FDA of not properly monitoring the
marketing activities of the pharmaceutical industry. An investigation by the
House Committee on Government Reform found that since December 2001, there has
been a sharp decline in enforcement actions taken against drug companies for
illegally promoting their products.
The investigation determined that
from 1999 to 2001, the FDA sent out 250 "Notice of Violation" or "Warning"
letters to drug companies; but for the time period of 2002 through 2004, the
agency sent out only 70 letters, which amounts to a reduction of more than
two-thirds.
Since the Vioxx and SSRI debacles, Senator Grassley has
jumped on the FDA every time there has been any indication that officials might
be putting the industry's interest over public safety. Earlier this year, he
wrote a letter to the FDA saying he was concerned that it might be "dropping the
regulatory ball" on stimulant drugs, prescribed to treat ADHD.
Specifically, he wrote, "I'm concerned FDA's regulatory responsibilities
haven't kept pace with the explosion of prescriptions written to treat 2.5
million children with these drugs."
Despite psychiatric and
cardiovascular risk signals associated with the drugs, he noted, it appears the
FDA has failed to promptly respond to their possible adverse effects. "Such
events," he wrote, "may include sudden unexplained deaths, strokes,
cardiovascular irregularities or aggression, anxiety and
depression."
Sales of drugs, he said, "have zoomed to the moon, jumping
from $759 million to $3.1 billion between 2000 and 2004."
"And yet," he
wrote, "the FDA seems to have adopted a wait-and-see approach before charting a
course of action to study these risks."
In early February 2006, he noted,
that an advisory panel had recommended adding the strongest black box warning to
ADHD drugs to alert patients about the possible cardiovascular side effects.
"The recommendation," Senator Grassley wrote, "brings even more urgency
to the controversy surrounding the explosion of prescriptions being filled with
these medicines."
"As the debate unfolds," he warned agency officials, "I
will continue to closely track the FDA and urge its timely, thorough review of
these drugs."
"With millions of Americans, mostly children, regularly
taking these medications," he added, "it is essential the FDA leaves no stone
unturned to investigate and review this class of drugs."
No doubt in
response to all the intense scrutiny from members of Congress, in late July
2006, the FDA outlined a series of changes it plans to make in the methods used
to evaluate clinical trials. One of the proposed changes would require a drug
company to notify the FDA immediately if it believes a researcher has committed
fraud during a clinical trial.
As it is now, drugs companies are trusted
to remove unreliable data and are not required to report any fraudulent activity
to the FDA until they actually submit the application.
The agency also
says it plans to clarify which adverse events in clinical trials must be
reported to the review boards that monitor the studies. Other proposed change
includes the standardization of forms used to collect information and a revision
of the rules on how patients may qualify to participate in clinical
trials.
However, people who are tempted to think that the FDA is capable
of changing under the agency's current team of politically appointed officials,
had better think again.
According to an article by Russell Mokhiber and
Robert Weissman, for Common Dreams on August 2, 2006, Dr Steven Nissen, chairman
of the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine at the Cleveland Clinic, was
recently a member of a panel debating the topic of: "Government Science Panels:
Fair and Balanced?" which was moderated by National Public Radio's Snigdha
Prakash, and sponsored the Center for Science in the Public Interest.
Dr
Nissen spoke about the conflict-of-interest problems "evident at the highest
levels of the FDA," the article says.
"For years," Dr Nissen said in
describing FDA leadership, "we had an interim FDA Commissioner, Lester Crawford,
who shortly after confirmation, abruptly resigns, apparently because he and his
wife owned stock in regulated companies."
"Then the administration
appointed Andrew Von Eschenbach as interim commissioner, creating another
conflict," he noted.
"In his role as director of the National Cancer
Institute," Dr Nissen said, "Von Eschenbach must seek FDA approval for human
testing or approval of new cancer drugs, an obvious conflict."
But even
worse, he said, "the administration appointed Scott Gottlieb as deputy
commissioner."
"He came to this job with no regulatory experience,
directly from Wall Street, where he served as a biotech analyst and stock
promoter," Dr Nissen stated.
"Between them," he said, "Drs. Von
Eschenbach and Gottlieb have whined incessantly about the need to speed drug
development."
"So while the American people worry about the safety of
drugs," he continued, "the top FDA leadership tells us we need faster drug
approval."
On November 12, 2005, the Boston Globe reported that prior to
his job at the FDA, Dr Gottlieb worked for the PR firm of Manning Selvage &
Lee and that his clients included Roche, the manufacturer of Tamiflu, and
Sanofi-Aventis, the maker of Ketek, and the parent company to the nation's sole
flu vaccine maker.
According to the Globe, the Manning PR firm paid Dr
Gottlieb a monthly retainer of $12,500 for nine months, for working on projects
that involved eight companies. Other firms regulated by the FDA that he was
involved with include Inamed Corp, a company seeking the return of silicone gel
implants to the market.
Between May and July 2005, Dr Gottlieb also was
paid $9,000 for consultant work performed for VaxGen, a company that won an $878
million government contract to supply the US with 75 million doses of anthrax
vaccine.
In any event, no matter who's in charge, the Senator from Iowa
is keeping the heat on. In July 2006, he wrote a letter to the Daniel Levinson,
the Inspector General at the Department of Health and Human Services, asking for
an investigation into whether Dr Brian Harvey of the FDA, conspired against Dr
Graham by providing Merck with details about Dr Graham's presentation on Vioxx,
prior to the hearing in 2004 to help the company refute his
testimony.
"It is no secret that Dr. Graham was and is a critic of the
FDA," he wrote to Inspector. "However," he said, "that does not mean the FDA
should scheme with drug sponsors to discredit its own employees."
Evelyn
Pringle evelyn.pringle@sbcglobal.net
Information for parties harmed by
pharmaceutical products can be found at Lawyers and Settlements.com
http://www.lawyersandsettlements.com/articles/fda_pharma.html
Evelyn Pringle is a columnist for OpEd News and
investigative journalist focused on exposing corruption in government and
corporate America.
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