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itehousetriestoreininscientists>>

White House Tries to Rein In Scientists

Sat Jun 26, 7:55 AM ET
 
By Tom Hamburger Times Staff Writer 

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration has ordered that government
scientists must be approved by a senior political appointee before they
can participate in meetings convened by the World Health Organization ( -
), the leading international health and science agency.   

A top official from the Health and Human Services ( - ) Department in
April asked the WHO to begin routing requests for participation in its
meetings to the department's secretary for review, rather than directly
invite individual scientists, as has long been the case. 


Officials at the WHO, based in Geneva, Switzerland, have refused to
implement the request, saying it could compromise the independence of
international scientific deliberations. Denis G. Aitken, WHO assistant
director-general, said Friday that he had been negotiating with
Washington in an effort to reach a compromise. 


The request is the latest instance in which the Bush administration has
been accused of allowing politics to intrude into once-sacrosanct areas
of scientific deliberation. It has been criticized for replacing highly
regarded scientists with industry and political allies on advisory
panels. A biologist who was at odds with the administration's position on
stem-cell research was dismissed from a presidential advisory commission.
This year, 60 prominent scientists accused the administration of
"misrepresenting and suppressing scientific knowledge for political
purposes." 


The president's science advisor, Dr. John Marburger, has called the
accusations "wrong and misleading, inaccurate." 


The newest action has drawn fresh criticism, however, as the request has
circulated among scientists. 


"I do not feel this is an appropriate or constructive thing to do," said
Dr. D.A. Henderson, an epidemiologist who ran the Bush administration's
Office of Public Health Preparedness and now acts as an official advisor
to Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson. "In the
scientific world, we have a generally open process. We deal with science
as science. I am unaware of such clearance ever having been required
before." 


Henderson worked for the WHO for 11 years directing its smallpox
eradication program. He said he could not recall having to go through
government bureaucrats to invite scientists to participate in expert
panels, except in the case of small Eastern European countries. In 2002,
Henderson received the Presidential Medal of Freedom ( - ), and was
praised by Bush as "a great general in mankind's war against disease." 


A few scientists have been worried about the department's vetting demand
since April, but concerns heightened this week when Rep. Henry A. Waxman
(D-Los Angeles) complained in a letter to Thompson. "The new policy …
politicizes the process of providing the expert advice of U.S. scientists
to the international community," Waxman wrote. 


Thompson's spokesman, Tony Jewell, called Waxman's criticism "seriously
misguided." 


"No one knows better than HHS who the experts are and who can provide the
most up-to-date and expert advice," Jewell said. "The World Health
Organization does not know the best people to talk to, but HHS knows. If
anyone thinks politics will interfere with Secretary Thompson's
commitment to improve health in every corner of the world, they are sadly
mistaken." 


The WHO, founded in 1947, is the United Nations ( - ) agency dedicated to
health. It is governed by 192 member states and conducts forums,
recommends international health and safety standards and draws leading
scientists from around the world to expert panels that review the latest
literature on chemical, biological, industrial and environmental threats.



The organization traditionally insists on picking experts to sit on
official scientific review panels. 


"It's an important issue for us," Aitken said. "We do need independent
science. If we want government positions, we have government meetings. We
have many, many of these government assemblies, but they address a
separate set of concerns" than the scientific gatherings. 


Scientists who attend the meetings are reminded that they are invited to
offer their scientific views, not to represent their government or
financial interests. 


The letter to Aitken declaring the new vetting policy was signed by
William R. Steiger, special assistant to Thompson. He came to Washington
with Thompson from Wisconsin, and is the son of a congressman and the
godson of former President George H.W. Bush. 


"Except under very limited circumstances, U.S. government experts do not
and cannot participate in WHO consultations in their individual
capacity," Steiger wrote. Civil service and other regulations "require
HHS experts to serve as representatives of the U.S. government at all
times and advocate U.S. government policies." 


The letter asserts that "the current practice in which the WHO invites
specific HHS officials by name to serve in these capacities has not
always resulted in the most appropriate selections." 

The letter provided no specifics. But WHO panels sometimes have disagreed
with positions taken by the administration. A WHO panel met in Lyons,
France, this month and declared formaldehyde a known carcinogen — relying
on studies that Bush administration political appointees in the
Environmental Protection Agency ( - ) had rejected as inconclusive. 

Voting members of the panel included scientists from the National Cancer
Institute ( - ) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
Health who had been authors of the studies. 

Several leading scientists said the new policy would undermine scientific
deliberations. 

"This is really tampering with a process that has worked very well," said
Linda Rosenstock, the dean of the UCLA School of Public Health who
directed the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health under
President Clinton ( - ). "To have this micromanaged at the HHS
departmental level raises the specter that political considerations
rather than scientific considerations will determine who is allowed to
go" to the world's most important scientific meetings. 

Rosenstock said that some WHO divisions — including the one reviewing
cancer threats — have become targets of industry groups. "There is real
concern that science could be trumped by politics and vested interests." 

For Waxman, a frequent critic of the administration, the department's
letter to the WHO is part of a pattern of mixing politics with science —
and one he contends diminishes U.S. stature internationally. 


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"If evil could be branded, its emblem would be the Wal-Mart logo."
-Inthesetimes article

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