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alp227

(32,037 posts)
Tue Apr 3, 2012, 02:27 AM Apr 2012

White House and the F.D.A. Often at Odds

Nancy-Ann DeParle, the whip-smart and sometimes caustic White House deputy chief of staff, picked up The Wall Street Journal one summer day in 2010 and got an unwelcome shock. The Food and Drug Administration was proposing as part of the new health care law to require that movie theaters post calorie counts for popcorn — and this was the first she had heard of it.

n the F.D.A.’s view, the law called for moviegoers to know that many a buttery bucket of popcorn had more calories than two Big Macs, but Ms. DeParle, President Obama’s chief health adviser, thought the requirement was unnecessary and would probably be lampooned on Fox News as an especially silly example of the government intrusions that conservatives often mocked as the nanny state.

Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, the F.D.A. commissioner appointed by Mr. Obama, soon heard about the White House’s displeasure and called Ms. DeParle at home one evening, people with knowledge of the call confirmed. The women had a decidedly chilly conversation. Within days, the F.D.A., an agency charged with protecting public health, backed down and dropped the notion of calorie counts for foods served in movie theaters and on airplanes.

Similar tussles have erupted between top administration officials and the F.D.A. over issues from the regulation of sunscreens and asthma inhalers to the enforcement of an agency decision on a drug to prevent premature births.

full: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/03/health/policy/white-house-and-fda-at-odds-on-regulatory-issues.html?pagewanted=all

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White House and the F.D.A. Often at Odds (Original Post) alp227 Apr 2012 OP
The FDA was right and Hamburg was wrong. saras Apr 2012 #1
Correct. Owlet Apr 2012 #2
 

saras

(6,670 posts)
1. The FDA was right and Hamburg was wrong.
Tue Apr 3, 2012, 03:08 AM
Apr 2012

You can always be inconsistent and hypocritical, of course.

But if you want to be sensible, you have to either label everything and allow people to make their own decisions, or try to make everything safe enough that it doesn't even NEED labels, or have stuff for sale that's unsafe, unhealthy, and dangerous, and just let it kill people. Unfortunately, if it only kills the poor (or "ignorant", if you want to be snotty about it), it can survive indefinitely.

Owlet

(1,248 posts)
2. Correct.
Tue Apr 3, 2012, 07:21 AM
Apr 2012

The F.D.A. is supposed to be an independent regulatory agency. The White House should butt out.

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