Do not make the mistake of thinking that because my conclusion is the same as another person's that my reasoning is the same
A Good Cause or Two
nbuf_button.gif bootbush.jpg
Click for more info

The Best of P6
The Racism Series The Reparations Series Installing a negro in your head Identity Blogging Where We Stand The LimbaughDiscussion That has Nothing To Do With Limbaugh
Updated when I write something really cool

Search
Local Links
The Attack on Civil Rights Corporate Influence on Government The Development of Race Basic Laws of Human Stupidity Blogger Archives
EMAIL ME AT
email.gif
Blogroll Me!
Blog-related mail may be published

The Public Library
The Black Experience in America The Souls of Black Folks My Bondage and My Freedom The Martin Luther King Jr. Collection Walker's AppealThe Shaping of Black America, Ch. 3
Updated as frequently as possible

Archives
April 18, 2004 - April 24, 2004 April 11, 2004 - April 17, 2004 April 04, 2004 - April 10, 2004 March 28, 2004 - April 03, 2004 March 21, 2004 - March 27, 2004 March 14, 2004 - March 20, 2004 March 07, 2004 - March 13, 2004 February 29, 2004 - March 06, 2004 February 22, 2004 - February 28, 2004 February 15, 2004 - February 21, 2004 February 08, 2004 - February 14, 2004 February 01, 2004 - February 07, 2004 January 25, 2004 - January 31, 2004 January 18, 2004 - January 24, 2004 January 11, 2004 - January 17, 2004 January 11, 2004 - January 17, 2004January 04, 2004 - January 10, 2004December 28, 2003 - January 03, 2004December 21, 2003 - December 27, 2003December 14, 2003 - December 20, 2003December 07, 2003 - December 13, 2003November 30, 2003 - December 06, 2003November 23, 2003 - November 29, 2003November 16, 2003 - November 22, 2003November 09, 2003 - November 15, 2003November 02, 2003 - November 08, 2003October 26, 2003 - November 01, 2003October 19, 2003 - October 25, 2003October 12, 2003 - October 18, 2003October 05, 2003 - October 11, 2003September 28, 2003 - October 04, 2003September 21, 2003 - September 27, 2003September 14, 2003 - September 20, 2003September 07, 2003 - September 13, 2003August 31, 2003 - September 06, 2003August 24, 2003 - August 30, 2003August 17, 2003 - August 23, 2003August 10, 2003 - August 16, 2003August 03, 2003 - August 09, 2003 July 27, 2003 - August 02, 2003 July 20, 2003 - July 26, 2003 July 13, 2003 - July 19, 2003 July 06, 2003 - July 12, 2003 June 29, 2003 - July 05, 2003 June 22, 2003 - June 28, 2003 June 15, 2003 - June 21, 2003 June 08, 2003 - June 14, 2003 June 01, 2003 - June 07, 2003 May 25, 2003 - May 31, 2003 May 18, 2003 - May 24, 2003 May 11, 2003 - May 17, 2003 May 04, 2003 - May 10, 2003 April 27, 2003 - May 03, 2003 April 20, 2003 - April 26, 2003 April 13, 2003 - April 19, 2003 April 06, 2003 - April 12, 2003
« On the horns of a trilemma | Main | Even Republicans know the Bushistas are full of it »

January 30, 2004
More administration laxness 

Trying to Police Misleading Drug Ads
By NAT IVES

Published: January 30, 2004

THE Food and Drug Administration is increasingly failing to enforce its own rules on prescription drug advertising, according to a report released yesterday by the ranking Democrat on the House Committee on Government Reform.

The report, issued by Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, found that the drug agency was sending fewer warning letters to pharmaceutical companies and taking longer to send them than in previous years.

Weak enforcement, Mr. Waxman said in a phone interview yesterday, contributes to unneeded or risky prescriptions for consumers and higher health care costs.

"We've issued this report in order to be constructive, because we want the F.D.A. to enforce the law," he added.

But F.D.A. officials said that the report overlooked the agency's new focus on other actions it considers more constructive, like clarifying its guidelines and sponsoring educational forums for pharmaceutical companies. They said focusing on the number of enforcement letters missed the bigger picture.

"The most important thing to note is that numbers games don't advance the public health," said Peter J. Pitts, the drug agency's associate commissioner for external relations. "We don't really have the luxury to say 'gotcha.' What we can do is make sure we have clear and effective communications."

In the glare of an election year, some Democrats said the report's findings could help illustrate larger campaign themes.

David Doak, a Democratic media consultant in Washington, said, "I'm not sure that this in and of itself will be an issue, but the air of permissiveness towards big business by this administration, and the ramifications that has on the public, could well be an issue, and I would argue already is."

The report examines a vital sales tool for pharmaceutical companies. The companies spent $2.5 billion in consumer advertising last year, according to an estimate by TNS Media Intelligence/CMR, which tracks marketing spending. That is about double the amount spent in 1998.

Mr. Waxman's staff found that the number of notices of violation or warning letters to pharmaceutical companies for misleading ads fell to 24 last year from 108 in 1999.

When the agency did contact companies about ads it found misleading or incomplete, moreover, it took longer to send its complaints, the report said. For 14 of the ads that generated letters last year, the agency sent letters an average of six months after the ads first appeared. By way of comparison, the report cites a General Accounting Office study of a five-month period in 2002, when the agency took an average of 41 days to send warning letters.



Posted by P6 at January 30, 2004 08:10 AM
Trackback URL: http://www.niggerati.net/mt/mt-tb.cgi/185
Comments

Damnit. I saw the headline and thought that someone was finally taking issue with these "Drug-Free America" ads.

Posted by Phelps at January 30, 2004 06:42 PM 
Post a comment









Remember personal info?