FDA’s mission is “at risk” because of inadequate funding. So says
Alliance for a Stronger FDA President Diane Dorman, testifying before the FDA
Science Board. Her remarks come 5 years after the Science Board made a similar
declaration, concluding that decades of underfunding had left FDA without the
resources to fulfill its mandate and make science-based decisions.
Congress responded with more monies for the agency, but since then
the FDA’s workload has increased even faster. The current threat to FDA comes
from two sources: four major new laws to implement since 2009; and changes in
the environment in which FDA operates, notably acceleration of globalization and
increasing scientific complexity.
Ms. Dorman’s remarks are reprinted below. If you care about FDA,
FDA Matters urges you to read her
testimony, go to the Alliance’s site (www.StrengthenFDA.org) and join.
Testimony of Diane E. Dorman
President, Alliance for a Stronger
FDA
Before the
Science Board of the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration
February 27, 2013
Good afternoon and thank you for the opportunity to address the
FDA Science Board.
My name is Diane Dorman and I am President of the Alliance for a
Stronger FDA, as well as Vice President for Policy at the National Organization
for Rare Disorders. The Alliance is a 200-member coalition of all FDA’s
stakeholders—consumers, patients, health professionals, trade groups and
industry. Our sole purpose is to advocate for increased appropriated resources
for the FDA.
When we started in 2006, FDA appropriations stood at slightly less
than $1.5 billion for an agency tasked with overseeing 100% of drugs, vaccines,
medical devices, and personal care products and 80% of our nation’s food supply.
Altogether, the products and industries regulated by FDA account for nearly 25%
of all consumer spending in the United States.
In short, FDA was the victim of decades of underfunding. It was
quite small, despite its vital, complex world-wide responsibilities. Presidents
weren’t asking for nearly enough money for FDA and Members of Congress were
responding by giving the bare appropriations that had been asked
for.
The Alliance’s goal was to change this situation by galvanizing
the FDA’s broad stakeholder community to focus attention on the consequences of
underfunding. We never doubted the accuracy of our analysis or the importance of
our cause.
Nonetheless, it was immensely helpful when–18 months after our
founding–the FDA Science Board released its own report in November 2007. As the
media described it—the FDA’s own Science Board evaluated the agency’s capacities
and responsibilities and declared that the agency’s mission was “at risk.” The word “crisis” was often used and was an
appropriate description of the situation.
Subsequently—and with the Alliance’s broad stakeholder
advocacy—the prospects for FDA improved. Policymakers acknowledged the
underfunding and acted aggressively to reverse it.
Continue reading testimony here
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