You'd think the U.S. FatalFood and Drug Administration (FDA) would be on the mend. After all, last December, The New York Times reported that the FDA is desperately short of money and poorly organized, which is putting people's lives at risk. A report entitled "FDA Science and Mission at Risk", which can be found at the Food and Drug Administration's website, highlights the numerous problems at the FDA.
Congress has spent a lot of their time looking at the FDA, and made a number of changes meant to clean things up after more than a decade of mismanagement. As part of these efforts, a while ago, we learned about the FDA handing out $35 million in bonuses under a new incentive plan. FDA Commissioner Andrew von Eschenbach (a very close personal friend of the Bush family) explained that the bonuses were necessary to attract and retain "highly experienced, highly capable technical experts." That sounds fair enough. After all, the FDA must compete with more lucrative offers from the drug industry in terms of recruiting and retaining talent. But a new report from CBS News provides some details on the FDA's bonus system, and frankly, the results are a bit more troubling.
2 comments:
Scott, you state: "That sounds fair enough. After all, the FDA must compete with more lucrative offers from the drug industry in terms of recruiting and retaining talent."
This argument aligns with the belief that monetary compensation is the ONLY viable metric to measure success. It precludes any assumption that some people (perhaps MANY people) want to be compensated fairly, but also have pride in their craft, and want to perform a needed service.
I have seen it bandied about on pharma blogs that unless pharma companies are well-rewarded (with untoward profits) they will not be incentivised to continue looking for new medicines, new treatments, possibly cures. I would argue that there are SCIENTISTS who would keep searching as long as there is breath in their bodies--regardless of compensation. Searching for answers is not merely what they do--it is what they ARE. Fred Banting and Jonas Salk immediately spring to mind as such individuals.
Over the years, I've met some committed individuals within the FDA who truly serve the public. Sadly, many of these public servants have been supplanted by inept political appointees in what, I guess, is Bush's legacy to positively PROVE the Peter Principle.
--Melody
Ugh... that's really maddening in the context of the Avandia debacle and other things they missed when it is their job to monitor.
And... we don't have enough money for Medicare etc. but these dudes are getting 48,000 extra a year?
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