http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-pbox27.html
Medical board members tied to company
January 27, 2002
About six times a year, Merck and Co. pays Dr. Lawrence Frenkel as much as
$750 to give talks on vaccines, including the chickenpox vaccine that Merck
makes.
Frenkel is one of five members of the state Immunization Advisory Committee
who have disclosed on reporting forms that they have financial interests in
Merck.
When the committee voted to recommend making the vaccine mandatory for
schoolchildren, Frenkel recused himself because he had a conflict of
interest. But he is a strong proponent of the vaccine and he participated in
committee discussions before the vote.
The University of Illinois pediatrician said drug company speaking fees, a
common practice in medicine, have not influenced his views, or those of his
colleagues. "Very few of us are going to let our intellectual opinion be
tainted by this," he said.
These are the other committee members who have reported financial interests
in Merck.
*Susanna Roberts, a DuPage County Health Department nurse, reported in 1999
that she owned $16,091 in Merck stock. She said she has since sold her
stock, although she still may own Merck shares in mutual funds. In any
event, she said she would not let her holdings affect how she votes.
*Robyn Gabel, executive director of the Illinois Maternal and Child Health
Coalition, reported that the coalition has received two $10,000 Merck
grants. One grant paid for a vaccine education seminar, and the other
supported a group that promotes immunizations among children under age 3.
The grants "were not related to any issue before the committee," Gabel
reported.
*Dr. Nancy Khardori of Southern Illinois University medical school gives
talks for Merck and another vaccine maker, GlaxoSmithKline. In most years,
her speaking fees total more than $5,000. But she said none of her talks has
been about the chickenpox vaccine.
*Connie Keelin of the DeWitt-Piatt Bi-County Health Department reported
receiving income from Merck investments. She does not know the exact amount,
but said it is less than $1,000.
Jim Ritter
Chicago Sun Times

Excerpted from
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1102/111402cdam1.htm
regarding the Homeland Security Bill
Limited liability protections already in place for vaccines would be
expanded to include vaccine components, such as the preservative Thimerosal,
manufactured by Eli Lilly & Co. and already the subject of several
class-action lawsuits by parents who claim the product's high mercury levels
have caused their children's autism.
Another conflict-- from the Eli Lilly site
Sidney Taurel
Chairman of the Board, President and Chief Executive Officer
Sidney Taurel is chairman, president and chief executive officer for Eli
Lilly and Company. He became chief executive officer in July 1998 and
chairman of the board of directors on January 1, 1999. Taurel had been
president and chief operating officer since February 1996 and a member of
the Lilly board of directors since July 1991. He is chairman of the
company's policy committee and senior management forum. Born a Spanish
citizen in Casablanca, Morocco, Taurel became an American citizen in
November 1995. After graduating from École des Hautes Études Commerciales,
in Paris, France, in 1969, he received a master of business administration
degree from Columbia University in 1971. Taurel joined the Lilly subsidiary
Eli Lilly International Corporation in 1971 as a marketing associate and was
named marketing plans manager for the Brazilian affiliate the following
year.
Returning to Europe in 1976, Taurel held several marketing and sales
assignments in Eastern Europe and France.
He became general manager of the company's affiliate in Brazil in 1981 and
was appointed to the London-based position of vice president of Lilly
European operations in 1983.
Taurel has lived in Indianapolis since 1986, when he returned to the city as
president of Eli Lilly International Corporation. He became executive vice
president of the pharmaceutical division in 1991 and was named executive
vice president of Eli Lilly and Company and president of its pharmaceutical
division in 1993.
Taurel is a member of the boards of IBM Corporation; McGraw-Hill Companies,
Inc.; and the RCA Tennis Championships and a member of the executive
committee of the board of directors of Pharmaceutical Research and
Manufacturers of America (PhRMA). He is also a member of The Business
Roundtable, The Business Council and the board of overseers of the Columbia
Business School and a trustee at Indianapolis Museum of Art. In 2001, Taurel
became a chevalier (knight) of the French Legion of Honor. Taurel was
appointed in June 2002 to the President’s Homeland Security Advisory
Council, a select group whose members were chosen to provide George W. Bush
with advice on homeland security matters.

Drug Company Executive New Head of Office of
Management and Budget Washington -- The Senate has confirmed Mitch
Daniels to be President George W. Bush's director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB). Daniels, who was the senior vice president
of Eli Lilly and Company, an Indianapolis-based pharmaceuticals company,
will head one of the largest of the White House executive offices, which
annually prepares the president's budget proposals to Congress.
Daniels' job will be particularly challenging in coming months as he
works to incorporate into the Bush budget the $1,600,000 million tax cut
proposal that the president-elect has pledged to seek.
OMB also is responsible for evaluating and coordinating management
procedures and program objectives, as well regulatory policy, within and
among all other federal offices, agencies and departments. "Mitch Daniels
is a successful businessman who has an extraordinary amount of experience
working within the federal government," Bush said in a December 22
statement read by his transition spokesman Ari Fleischer in Austin,
Texas. "He will be an important adviser within my administration. (He)
will help ensure that our federal government maintains fiscal
discipline."
Daniels served as former President Reagan's top assistant for political
and intergovernmental relations in 1985-87 and later served as a special
assistant for domestic affairs. Daniels also served as senior adviser to
Senator Richard Lugar, an Indiana Republican, and as executive director
of the National Republican Senatorial Committee.
"There is no better person to fill this extremely important government
position than Mitch Daniels," Lugar said in a statement issued December
22. "His broad ranging abilities, experiences and intelligence will make
him an outstanding Office of Management and Budget director. He will
bring vision and skill to government leadership and U.S. economic
growth." Following his work in the White House, Daniels served as
president and chief executive officer of the Hudson Institute, a public
policy research institution. During his tenure at the institute, Daniels
served as a volunteer adviser to the National Party during the 1989
Honduran election.
Daniels joined Eli Lilly and Company in 1990, becoming president of
Lilly's North American pharmaceutical operations in 1993. He was named to
his current position in 1997. "He possesses a rare combination of keen
intellect, high integrity and a great sense of humor," Sidney Taurel,
Lilly chairman and president, said after the OMB announcement. Daniels
received his bachelors degree from Princeton University and a law degree
from Georgetown University.

Vermin at the Gates of the University of Medicine and
Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ)
The Autism Center is being formed at UMDNJ, Newark, NJ that includes among
others, Dr. James Oleske, Dr. Harumi Jyonouchi, Dr. Walter Zahorodny and Dr.
Xue Ming that is important for our children.
There is vermin in the form of people with Merck connections that are in
the gates (one) and knocking at the gates (two) of UMDNJ. One inside.......
In the latest Fall 2002 edition of The Foundation's Outlook (the Foundation
of UMDNJ newsletter), page 5.
President of Merck Vaccines at Merck & Co. Appointed to Foundation Board
Adel A.F. Mahmoud, MD, PhD, president of Merck Vaccines at Merck & Co.,
Inc., has been elected to the Board of Trustees of the Foundation of UMDNJ.
Two outside......
From the October 16, 2002 edition of the Morris County Daily Record on page
A4 but not on the web site at http://www.dailyrecord.com/
"At a statehouse roundtable Tuesday the leaders praised a report by the
Commission on Health, Science, Education and Training, which recommends
compressing Rutgers, the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey
and the New Jersey Institute of Technology into a single system. The name of
the new system has not yet been determined; while the commission has
proposed 'the University of New Jersey,' Gov. James E. McGreevey and many
Rutgers alumni contend it should retain its historic moniker in some
form..........
The commission headed by former Merck CEO Dr. P. Roy Vagelos, called for
freestanding universities where scholars from diverse disciplines can
develop special areas of expertise to serve their local communities and the
state's burgeoning pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries."
Here is the kicker about the New Jersey Governor Jim McGreevey, he was a
lawyer/lobbyist for Merck & Co.
Under 06 USA New Jersey, Profile (Jim McGreevey) "Lobbyist for Merck &
Co."http://www.chez.com/vipsinfo/1n45e.htm
"McGreevey worked as a lobbyist for the pharmaceutical giant Merck &
Co."http://www.wpunj.edu/cohss/polisci/faculty/sswhitmn.htm (under
Tweedledee)
So we have Dr. Adel Mahmoud, Dr. P. Roy Vagelos and Gov. Jim McGreevey all
ready and willing to make sure that there is no immunology research done for
autism especially if it concerns the MMR vaccine at UMDNJ. Vermin at the
Gates of UMDNJ.
Ray Gallup

http://www.thisislondon.com/news/articles/9305535?source=Evening
Double standards claim over MMR
By Isabel Oakeshott, Evening Standard, Health Correspondent
24 February 2004
Health chiefs stand charged with hypocrisy today after accusing a leading
MMR scientist of "mixing spin and science". The Government claims Dr
Andrew Wakefield had a conflict of interest when he produced a study
suggesting a link between the vaccine and autism, because he was paid
£55,000 by lawyers to investigate whether MMR was safe. Chief Medical
Officer Professor Sir Liam Donaldson described the work as "poor science"
and Prime Minister Tony Blair seized on the revelations to call for an
end to the debate over the vaccine's safety.
But autism campaigners today revealed that at least 19 experts on
government-appointed committees, which declared the vaccine safe, also
had conflicts of interest. Some of the doctors and scientists have shares
in drugs firms that make the jabs, and others received research grants
from them.
More than a dozen experts from the Committee on Safety of Medicines and
the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation - which produced
reports stating that the vaccine was safe - are named by the campaigners.
They include:
Dr Phil Minor, who has been paid to advise MMR vaccine distributor
GlaxoSmithKline on a legal case brought by families who say their
children were damaged by the vaccine.
Professor Henry Dargie, Professor John Smyth and Professor Jonathan
Cohen, who worked as consultants to GlaxoSmithKline.
Dr David Goldblatt, who was an "occasional member of expert panels" for
GlaxoSmith-Kline and MMR supplier Aventis Pasteur. Non-personal interests
include "industrial support" from the drugs company.
Dr Colin Forfar and Dr Michael Donaghy, who have shares in
GlaxoSmithKline.
Professor David Nutt, who has been a consultant for Glaxo-SmithKline and
is also a shareholder in the company.
Bill Welsh, of the anti-MMR group Action Against Autism, said: "If the
Government wants to start looking for conflicts of interest, they only
have to look at their own house. The number of experts on their so-called
independent panels who have stakes in drugs companies is incredible.
"It is rank hypocrisy for them to criticise Dr Wakefield over the funding
he received."
The row highlights the links between scientists and doctors and
pharmaceutical giants, which fund thousands of research studies each
year. Today politicians described the links as a "major problem" and
called for more independence in medical research. Labour MP David
Hinchcliffe, chairman of the Commons health select committee, said: "This
whole debate has exposed the way in which research is compromised by the
commercial realities of funding. I think this is becoming
a great difficulty."
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