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Special Interest Provision Protects Drug Companies
At Expense Of Parents And Children
In Homeland Security Bill
November 19, 2002
MR. LEAHY. Mr. President, tucked away into the
Homeland Security bill is a small provision that no one seems to want
to take credit for and yet it would bestow huge benefits on just one
interest group. According to news accounts, Sections 714 through 716
of the Homeland Security bill were “something the White House wanted,”
not necessarily something the House or Senate wanted.
This explanation hardly clarifies why we are
including such a far-reaching amendment that has nothing to do with
homeland security in this bill. It hardly explains why, in these
final days of the 107th Congress, we have decided so
blatantly to put the interests of a few corporate pharmaceutical
manufacturers before the interests of thousands of consumers, parents
and children.
Sections 714, 715 and 716 basically give a “get
out of court free card” to Eli Lilly and other manufacturers of
thimerasol. Thimerasol is a mercury-based vaccine preservative that
was used until recently in children’s vaccines for everything from
hepatitis B to diphtheria. Unfortunately, while these vaccines were
intended to help protect our children’s health, there are many health
professionals and parents who now believe the opposite occurred.
Parents and health professionals are now
concerned that using vaccines with thimerasol has exposed as many as
30 million American children to mercury levels far exceeding the
“safe” level recommended by the Environmental Protection Agency. In
1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Public Health Service
began urging vaccine manufacturers to stop using thimerosal as quickly
as possible. Since then, parents of autistic children around the
country have gone to court to hold pharmaceutical companies liable for
the alleged damage caused by thimerosal. Many of these parents now
cite pharmaceutical manufacturer’s own documents to show that they
knew of the potential risk of using mercury-based preservatives back
in the 1940s and yet did not stop its use.
Now, tucked away in the Homeland Security bill,
we find this small provision that changes the definition of a vaccine
manufacturer to include those companies that made vaccine
preservatives. This small change to the Vaccine Injury Compensation
Program cuts the legs out from under the families involved in pending
lawsuits against thimerosal manufacturers. The amendment is obvious
in its attempt to put up roadblocks to these cases. Those who brought
the cases against manufacturers would lose their option of going to
court while the manufacturers get new protections from large
judgments.
Let’s be clear about this provision. It has
nothing to do with homeland security. Smallpox and anthrax vaccines
do not use thimerosal. We should not take away the rights of our
citizenry under the guise of trying to protect them.
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