As the end of the semester wraps up I had all of my friends come together for one final night on the town. Not everyone was able to attend however those that did we all had a great time. We started at Pancake Manor which is like IHOP but better and then went to the Victory where we met up with Ashleigh and all of her friends for her going away party as well. It was a great night.Two days late
Monthly Archives: June 2010
If London was a marathon Spain was a sprint
We concluded our last evening in London with dinner with Salys Swedish friend and his friends whom he was visiting in London followed by a few drinks nearby. Pimms we were recommended is a super English drink which is amazing and Id say its somewhere around a Jerimiah weedlongisland but with much less alcohol. The next morning we checked out of the hostel stored our luggage and contnued
New Rx for Young Doctors: Shorter Work Day – Wall Street Journal
![]() TopNews United Kingdom (blog) | New Rx for Young Doctors: Shorter Work Day Wall Street Journal Residency, the multiyear training period after doctors complete medical school and before they practice independently, is notoriously rigorous. ... Rookie docs may get more oversight, shorter shiftsThe Associated Press Rules Would Reduce Hours for Hospital Doctor InternsBusinessWeek |
Valerie Parisi named dean at Wayne State University medical school – Crain’s Detroit Business
Valerie Parisi named dean at Wayne State University medical school Crain's Detroit Business Noren, also an MD, promoted Parisi after a recommendation by the medical school's executive committee, and approval by the school's faculty and from the ... |
Lack of funding threatens UCR’s medical school – Press-Enterprise
Lack of funding threatens UCR's medical school Press-Enterprise After the last slide, Olds, the school's founding dean, made his pitch. "I cannot open this medical school without evidence of state support," Olds said in ... |
Marshall Medical School recognized for its social mission – West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Marshall Medical School recognized for its social mission West Virginia Public Broadcasting June 25, 2010 · A new study out show Marshall's medical school is among the best in the country for meeting its "social mission. ... |
Someone to Watch Over Me – New York Times
![]() New York Times (blog) | Someone to Watch Over Me New York Times When we were interns, fresh out of medical school, for example, Dr. M seemed to be everywhere at once, filling our lives with directives on patient ... Rookie docs may get more oversight, shorter shiftsCTV.ca |
The FDA for the Average SBM Consumer
How the Food and Drug Administration came to be is a story that is filled with death, intrigue and dubious characters. It also, like most stories, has its share of heroes and vindications. The list of those who have died to bring us the agency we know today is long, but even today, the death-toll continues. Now this is not the horrible thing it may at first seem. People are all born with a terminal disease known as life, and they will die. The goal of Medicine is to forestall that death as long as possible and to give people good, long, healthy and safe lives. This is where the Food and Drug Administration comes into play. They help guide the pharmaceutical world in the safest manner possible.
The legal quagmire that is the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is a result of a series of laws which it behooves the Science-Based Medical community, to understand. Many of these laws were a result of deaths, which were themselves the result of either poor safeguards, or, as we will see in one case, lack of information on the part of a company. It began with the Division of Chemistry inside the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The original concern of this group was the misbranding and adulteration of both food and drugs. The first of the laws which came into effect, to give the Bureau of Chemistry as it became known, was the Biologics Control Act of 1902. As is so often the case with FDA regulations, this was a result of deaths in the populous.
The Biologics Control Act of 1902 came about after children had died from vaccines for both diphtheria and smallpox. In the first case, a horse named Jim, who had been used to produce some 30 quarts of diphtheria antitoxin, was found to have contracted tetanus. This was after additional diphtheria antitoxin had been produced, packaged and shipped and resulted in the death of 13 children in St. Louis, Missouri. The second case, which involved a contaminated smallpox vaccine, claimed the lives of nine children in Camden, New Jersey. The BCA of 1902 directly led to the creation of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research or CBER. This act set the precedent for regulating drug products, specifically Biologics.
This was followed, in 1906 by the “Wiley Act” which is also known as the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 which prohibited the “manufacture, sale, or transportation of adulterated or misbranded or poisonous or deleterious foods, drugs, medicines, and liquors, and for regulating traffic therein, and for other purposes.”1 During this time, the enforcement for this act was given to Harvey Washington Wiley (Yes, the same Wiley the Act was named after) and the USDA Bureau of Chemistry. Slowly, the Food & Drug Administration is being born. One of the first major legal tests to this was United States v. Johnson2in which the Supreme Court held that “misbranding” did not attach to the therapeutic claims of the drug product but only to the ingredients. The case involved containers of medicinal product bearing labels that stated or implied that the contents were effective in curing cancer, when the creator knew that such representations were false. To quote Justice Holmes, “One may say with some confidence that, in idiomatic English, this half at least, is confined to identity, and means a false statement as to what the ingredients are.” This ruling was a serious blow for the fledgling agency and Congress responded with the Sherley Amendment in 1912 which clarified the authority to enforce the Wiley Act based on fraud in the therapeutic claim. In 1927, the government underwent a reorganization and the Bureau of Chemistry was folded into the Food, Drug and Insecticide organization within the USDA. Three years later, this became the Food & Drug Administration.
In the 1930’s we had another major event which influenced the laws surrounding the FDA. One of the important things to understand is that the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906 did not regulate, in any way, the safety of new drugs, and was mainly concerned with those drugs already on the market. This is where the story of Elixir Sulfanilamide enters the picture. Created in 1937 by the S. E. Massengill Company, this sulfanilamide concoction was prepared with diethylene glycol (DEG) as a solvent. DEG was at this point known to be toxic, although the exact extent of its toxicity was not known.3In September of 1937, Elixir Sulfanilamide was being sold in the U.S. Markets and by October the American Medical Association had begun receiving complaints about possible deaths resulting from it. An important name for later appears here for the first time. Frances Oldham Kelsey, during her Ph.D. in Pharmacology studies at the University of Chicago, assisted in the research project which showed that the 100 deaths from Elixir Sulfanilamide were due to the DEG which was used as a solvent.4These deaths were classified as fatal adverse events. The FDA at this time was hampered in its authority as to what action it could take. Under the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906, the ability of the FDA to regulate this “medication” was reduced to labeling. According to the regulations, an “Elixir” was required to contain some percentage of alcohol to be permitted to be labeled as such. Elixir Sulfanilamide contained none. The end result of this was that the S. E. Massengill Company paid a small fine and their chief Chemist, Harold Watkins, committed suicide5. But, as with most regulations, it didn’t end there. Congress now passed the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938.
The Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938 was a major leap forward for the FDA. Now, for the first time, the Agency had an ability to regulate a drug before it came onto the markets. A key part of the Act mandated that safety data had to be collected and reviewed prior to marketing of a New Chemical Entity (NCE). Additionally the FDA no longer needed to prove fraudulent intent before intervening with false or misleading labeling. These were major steps forward for the FDA and with the additional inspection authorities that the FDA gained, the Agency that we know today was basically formed. This Act also saw Homeopathic Nostrums classified as a “drug” by the FDA. They are protected under Section 201(g) and 201(j) of the act and this was the FDA’s first serious attempt at regulating these products.
In 1951 we see the next major step in the process with the Durham-Humphrey Amendment. This Amendment had the effect of basically creating a class of drug which must be taken under the supervision of a medical practitioner, the so called “prescription only” drugs. In addition, the 1940’s had seen two Amendments, the Insulin and Penicillin Amendments added a requirement for potency testing. During this time the Public Health Services Act of 1944 expanded the Agency’s scope to cover biological products as well.
This brings us to 1959 and to a tragedy on a global scale which was, through decisive action on the part of one FDA reviewer, greatly minimized in the United States. Although the tragedy would take a few years to manifest itself, 1959 saw the US Senate try to put in place regulations to have pharmaceutical companies demonstrate the efficacy of their product. There was a great deal of push back from both the public and the pharma industry, but this stopped in 1962 when thalidomide appeared.
As this is one of the true pivotal moment in the history of the FDA, we will examine it in a bit more detail. Thalidomide came on to the European Markets in 1957 and was used as a pain killer and tranquilizer6. Another key reason for its use was that it was found to combat morning sickness in pregnant women. That was to be Thalidomide’s ultimate downfall. During the 1950’s and 1960’s, after Thalidomide made it onto the Market, more than 10,000 children in 46 countries were born with deformities. This alarmed two European Doctors who began investigating the reasons7. Now we meet Frances Oldham Kelsey again. Remember her from earlier? By this time she had completed both her PhD and her M.D. and was working as a reviewer at the FDA. When Thalidomide, also known as Kevadon, came across her desk she decided that the safety documentation was not sufficient to support the requested indication of relief from morning sickness. The Application was rejected8. Richardson Merrell (Now Marion Merrell Dow), the manufacturer, then attempted to apply pressure to have their drug approved, but Dr. Kelsey remained firm in her desire for safety studies. What Richardson Merrell did manage to do was distribute 2.5 million pills to approximately 1,200 doctors in the US with the understanding that this product was not approved and still “under investigation”. As Dr. Kelsey dug deeper into the product, the 10,000 birth defects became publically known and Richardson Merrell rescinded their Application. Seventeen (17) children in the US were born with birth defects as a result of Thalidomide. Currently it is marketed in the United States by Celgene under the name Thalomid and is part of a RiskMAP known as S.T.E.P.S.
The Thalidomide incident led directly to the Kefauver-Harris Amendment of 1962. This is also known as the “Drug Efficacy Amendment”9. The main effect of this Amendment on the FDA was that they now had the authority to mandate clinical studies to show that a Drug is both safe and effective.
As we draw to the close of the establishment of the FDA, a few more milestones should be noted. In 1976 the Medical Device Amendments expanded the FDA’s reach to cover medical devices. 1983 saw the Orphan Drug Act which makes it easier to conduct studies and research drugs for rare diseases. The Food and Drug Administration Act of 1988 makes the FDA part of the Department of Health and Human Services. Finally, in 2007, the Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act (FDAAA) put in place the ability for the FDA to being mandating Risk Management and Evaluation Strategies (R.E.M.S.) for products which have a high risk to patient populations, which was brought about, in part by the death related to Class II Extended Release Opioid Products.
This is how the FDA grew out of a few small offices to the true Agency that it is today. It has, through trial and error, learned to deal with death, unscrupulous marketing and outright contempt. The FDA will not be going anywhere soon, and with the recent appointment of Dr. Hamburg as the Commissioner the focus on Safety will once again be brought to the forefront as we are already seeing in some of the more recent enforcement actions the Agency has undertaken.
- United States Statutes at Large (59th Cong., Sess. I, Chp. 3915, p. 768-772)
- United States v. Johnson 221 U.S. 488 (1911)
- Schep LJ, Slaughter RJ, Temple WA, Beasley DM (July 2009). “Diethylene glycol poisoning”. Clin Toxicol (Phila) 47 (6): 525–35.
- Bren, Linda (March/April 2001). “Frances Oldham Kelsey: FDA Medical Reviewer Leaves Her Mark on History”. FDA Consumer.
- Mihm, Stephen (2007-08-26). “A tragic lesson”. The Boston Globe.
- Moghe, Vijay V; Ujjwala Kulkarni, Urvashi I Parmar (2008). “Thalidomide”. Bombay Hospital Journal (Bombay: Bombay Hospital) 50 (3): 446.
- Anon. “Widukind Lenz”. Who named it?. Ole Daniel Enersen. http://www.whonamedit.com/doctor.cfm/1002.html.
- 1986. “Frances Kelsey”. Canada Heirloom Series. Heirloom Publishing Inc.
- Peltzman, Sam. An Evaluation of Consumer Protection Legislation: The 1962 Drug Amendments. The Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 81, No. 5. (Sep. – Oct., 1973), pp. 1051.
Martin A. Lessem is a Regulatory Attorney with eight years of working in the Pharmaceutical Industry. Although currently working for a Generic manufacturer, Martin has worked for Innovator companies as well. His current area of expertise is Risk Management, specifically the new R.E.M.S. guidelines, Promotional Compliance and the Regulatory aspects of Clinical Trials. The views that he expresses in his posts are his own and do not necessarily reflect those of his current or previous companies.
Ronald Bailey: Plastic Brains, Femmebots, and Aliens Watching TV
Reason Online's science correspondant Ronald Bailey has published his account of the Humanity+ Summit recently held at Harvard University.
NYT: Merely Human? That’s So Yesterday
I'm sure most of you have caught this by now, but the New York Times recently published a 5,000 word article about the Singularity University, Ray Kurzweil, and the technological Singularity. All the usual suspects are referenced within, including the IEET's James Hughes, Terry Grossman, Peter Thiel, Peter Diamandis, Andrew Hessel, Sonia Arrison, and William S. Bainbridge.
A taste of the article:
Richard A. Clarke, former head of counterterrorism at the National Security Council, has followed Mr. Kurzweil’s work and written a science-fiction thriller, “Breakpoint,” in which a group of terrorists try to halt the advance of technology. He sees major conflicts coming as the government and citizens try to wrap their heads around technology that’s just beginning to appear.
“There are enormous social and political issues that will arise,” Mr. Clarke says. “There are vast groups of people in society who believe the earth is 5,000 years old. If they want to slow down progress and prevent the world from changing around them and they engaged in political action or violence, then there will have to be some sort of decision point.”
Mr. Clarke says the government has a contingency plan for just about everything — including an attack by Canada — but has yet to think through the implications of techno-philosophies like the Singularity. (If it’s any consolation, Mr. Long of the Defense Department asked a flood of questions while attending Singularity University.)
Mr. Kurzweil himself acknowledges the possibility of grim outcomes from rapidly advancing technology but prefers to think positively. “Technological evolution is a continuation of biological evolution,” he says. “That is very much a natural process.”
Disturbing fact revealed in the article: Google and Microsoft employees trailed only members of the military as the largest individual contributors to Ron Paul’s 2008 presidential campaign.
For a curious and infuriating response to the NYT article, be sure to check out Pete Shank's "A Singular Kind of Eugenics," but be warned: the bullshit factor is off the charts (e.g. Shank is terribly confused about the history of transhumanism, particularly the role and evolution of the Extropy Institute, the World Transhumanist Association, Humanity+ and the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies).
Singularity Summit 2010: August 14-15
The Singularity Summit for 2010 has been announced and will be held on August 14-15 at the San Francisco Hyatt Regency. Be sure to register soon.
This year's Summit, which is hosted by the Singularity Institute, will focus on neuroscience, bioscience, cognitive enhancement, and other explorations of what Vernor Vinge called 'intelligence amplification' -- the other route to the technological Singularity.
Of particular interest to me will be the talk given by Irene Pepperberg, author of "Alex & Me," who has pushed the frontier of animal intelligence with her research on African Gray Parrots. She will be exploring the ethical and practical implications of non-human intelligence enhancement and of the creation of new intelligent life less powerful than ourselves.
A sampling of the speakers list includes:
- Ray Kurzweil, inventor, futurist, author of The Singularity is Near
- James Randi, skeptic-magician, founder of the James Randi Educational Foundation
- Dr. Anita Goel, a leader in the field of bionanotechnology, Founder & CEO, Nanobiosym, Inc.
- Dr. Irene Pepperberg, leading investigator of animal intelligence, trainer of the African Grey Parrot "Alex"
- Prof. Alan Snyder, Director, Centre for the Mind at the University of Sydney, researcher in brain-computer interfaces
- Prof. Steven Mann, augmented reality pioneer, professor at University of Toronto, "world's first cyborg"
- Dr. Gregory Stock, bioethicist and biotech entrepreneur, author of Engineering Humans: Our Inevitable Genetic Future
- Dr. Ellen Haber-Katz, a professor at the Wistar Institute who studies rapid-regenerating mice
- Joe Z. Tsien, scholar at the Medical College of Georgia, who created a strain of "Doogie Mouse" with twice the memory of average mice
- Eliezer Yudkowsky, research fellow with the Singularity Institute
- Michael Vassar, president of the Singularity Institute
- David Hanson, CEO of Hanson Robotics, creator of the world's most realistic humanoid robots
- Demis Hassabis, research fellow at the Gatsby Computational Neuroscience Unit at the University of London
From the press release:
Will it be one day become possible to boost human intelligence using brain implants, or create an artificial intelligence smarter than Einstein? In a 1993 paper presented to NASA, science fiction author and mathematician Vernor Vinge called such a hypothetical event a "Singularity", saying "From the human point of view this change will be a throwing away of all the previous rules, perhaps in the blink of an eye". Vinge pointed out that intelligence enhancement could lead to "closing the loop" between intelligence and technology, creating a positive feedback effect.
This August 14-15, hundreds of AI researchers, robotics experts, philosophers, entrepreneurs, scientists, and interested laypeople will converge in San Francisco to address the Singularity and related issues at the only conference on the topic, the Singularity Summit. Experts in fields including animal intelligence, artificial intelligence, brain-computer interfacing, tissue regeneration, medical ethics, computational neurobiology, augmented reality, and more will share their latest research and explore its implications for the future of humanity.
FastForward Radio interview
In case you missed it, here's the podcast of my recent appearance on FastForward Radio where I reviewed the recent Humanity+ Summit at Harvard.
No more 23andMe blog posts. The Sherpa has achieved his goals.

I am absolutely done talking about 23andMe.
Yes, you have heard correctly.
That doesn't mean I will stop watching what they are doing.
It means that I have coerced them into doing what's right. For now.
From the very beginning 23andMe had potential, heck Dr. Jeremiah Mahoney told me they came up to Yale to see them.
They must have not liked what Yale said, because they went further up the line and partnered with George Church.
Well, they def. didn't like what I had to say.
I had even conjectured about DTCG and what this landscape may look like and even warn about the shortcomings,
I had been pointing all of you to SACGHS to watch where this regulatory environment may go. The environment was heated with these companies going in.
So I knew I had to pay attention to what they were doing, especially the Google Backed company.....
First when these companies launch
1. I immediately point out 23andMe isn't using a CLIA certified lab which gives me grave concern over the seriousness with which they are doing testing. A-la Garage lab versus proper human sample processing.
2. I complain on Daniel MacArthur's blog about the obvious rookie blunder this company with no healthcare experience in leadership makes
Then 23andMe uses a CLIA certified lab
Second, I tell you that the states who have serious laws against DTC will shut down these companies quickly
Then they shut 'em down for a bit. And I gloat
Third
1. I complain that FDA needs to get their act together and in 2009 23andMe began doing absolute truly clinical testing with BRCA testing.
2. I point out the SACGHS feels the same way too and also complains to the FDA
3. I point out that 23andMe has no clinical clue what they are doing with PGx
Guess what? The FDA finally rules for regulation.
Lastly,
1. I complain about this research revolution akin to Tuskegee or other non IRB approved "research"
2. I point out that Google has off shore servers to hold this data free of US regulation.
3. I say that they are coercing subjects and offering discounts that wouldn't fly in an IRB
Today, they announce they have obtained IRB approval.
But I have my doubts as they have flaunted loopholes in laws And seem to point that out again today, or at least their blogger does.....
"our research technically does not require IRB review."
So I guess I will have to keep posting until these guys stop skirting lines..............Nevermind
The Sherpa Says: Yes, why keep it up if they did what I asked? Because they will do it again, even if it takes an act of Congress. Why do I ask? To protect the patient and consumer from mega corporations whose interest is anything but patient empowerment.
Keep searching for those spiritual answers – Monroe News Star
Keep searching for those spiritual answers Monroe News Star In Buddhism, salvation from suffering comes from understanding the true nature of reality and thus achieving Enlightenment. Buddhism has no god. ... |
Have You Noticed the iPhone Reception Problem in Practice? [Qotd]
We've seen many examples of iPhone 4 reception problems when people hold their devices a certain way, but we're wondering: What about during normal use? Have you experienced reception problems when you're not trying to replicate the so-called death grip? More »
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IPhone - smartphone - Handhelds - Apple - Antenna
Rumor: iOS 4.01 Update Coming on Monday, Will Fix Reception Problems [Unconfirmed]
You hold your iPhone a certain way and poof! There goes your reception. According to Apple Insider, the issue may not be hardware-related but rather a software quirk: More »
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Cisco IOS - IPhone - Smartphone - Handhelds - Apple
This Is Why I Hate Video Chats [Image Cache]
Go Go Gadget Cat Legs! [Prosthetics]
This cute cat is named Oscar. He lost his rear legs in an accident, but thanks to veterinary surgeon Noel Fitzpatrick and some bionic leg implants, Oscar can walk again. Here is a video of some of his first steps. More »
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Cat - Prosthetics - Pets - Recreation - Products and Services
The iPhone 4 Voice Command Cheat Sheet [IPhone]
You probably know you can make your iPhone do stuff using your voice. "Play music!" Old hat, but there's a few new commands for iOS 4, like "What time is it?" [ATMac] More »
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IPhone - Smartphone - Handhelds - Apple - Wallpapers and Themes
Medical School Shuns Industry Funding of Continuing Medical Education – Newsinferno.com
![]() City Town Info Education Channel | Medical School Shuns Industry Funding of Continuing Medical Education Newsinferno.com The University of Michigan Medical School will stop taking money from the drug and medical device industry to pay for continuing medical education (CME), ... Debate Over Pharmaceutical Funding For Continuing Medical EducationCity Town Info Education Channel CME debate spurs med school to spurn pharma fundingFiercePharma U of Michigan to Reject Industry Sponsors for CMEMedPage Today Times of India all 5 news articles » |





