A good friend of mine who works as a medical researcher for both the FDA and the NIH has told me some pretty horrifying stories about how the current Administration has gutted basic science.
Where reproductive health is concerned, the ideological intrustion into basic science is especially alarming.
This friend works primarily with infectious diseases, including those that are spread through sex. Recently, he brought this NY Times article to my attention:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9C07E7D91F31F93AA15751C1A9609C8B63"But I thought we have this huge global fund to pay for those meds?!?" I exclaimed.
"Oh, you mean PEPFAR," he said, his voice dripping with derisive sarcasm. "That was the Administration's way to prop up big pharma, which was facing off-patent generics from places like India and South America. Here in the U.S., each state administers a Federal program called ADAP. Several states struggle to keep from having a waiting list."
Sure enough, I did some research, and discovered that my native state had only just recently eliminated its latest backlog:
http://kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_index.cfm?DR_ID=42099Waiting list policies in several states signal a nervous worry that they will either need to create (or, in some cases, reinstitute) a waiting list:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&q=adap+%22waiting+list%22PEPFAR = President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (foreign)
ADAP = AIDS Drug Assistance Programs (domestic)
The more I looked into this, the more outraged I got. When a 24-year-old college student in South Carolina has to drop out of school, and practically beg for life-saving meds, something is seriously wrong with the priorities:
http://www.poz.com/articles/401_11096.shtmlMy friend asked me who in the new Congress he might contact, in order to share firsthand knowledge about the Bush political appointees' interference with grants, basic science, and life-saving information.
I shouldn't have been surprised:
http://oversight.house.gov/investigations.asp?Issue=HIV/AIDS: )
As we continued to discuss this issue, my friend came up with a very simple, very elegant idea for fully funding ADAP programs in all 50 states: attach a funding rider to the "President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief" (foreign) that requires any funding shortfall in state ADAP programs to be funded out of PEPFAR funds, before any of those funds can be spent overseas.
Of course, we both agreed that absent the tax cuts and the war of choice in Iraq, these budget decisions would be easier, but I like his stopgap solution in the interim.
- Dave