Invisible Victims

· Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The National Transportation Safety Board has again recommended that airlines require a separate seat for all children, regardless of age, eliminating the current practice of permitting children under the age of 2 to fly for free on the lap of a parent. Will mandating child restraint systems make air travel safer? The answer is probably yes but that's the visible.

Having to purchase an extra airplane ticket, some families will opt to drive to their destination instead. Thus, mandated CRS will force some families to switch to a less safe method of travel and some highway fatalities will represent the invisible victims of NTSB policy. By the way, if parents wanted a greater measure of safety for their infant, it's available to them right now. They can purchase a seat and seat restraint for their infant.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is charged with ensuring that drugs are safe and effective. Drugs must meet FDA approval before they can be marketed. FDA officials can make two kinds of errors. They can approve a drug that has unanticipated, dangerous side effects that might cause illness and death. Or, they can err by either not approving or causing huge delays in the marketing of a safe and effective drug. Statistically, these are known as the Type I and Type II errors.

FDA officials have a bias toward erring on the side of over-caution. If FDA officials err on the side of under-caution, approving an unsafe drug, they are attacked by the media, patient groups and investigated by Congress. Their victims, sick and dead people, are highly visible. If FDA officials err on the side of over caution, keeping a safe and effective drug off the market, who's to know? The victims are invisible.

If you conclude that FDA officials have a bias toward errors that create invisible victims, who don't know whom to blame for their illness or death, step to the head of the class. Particularly egregious examples are: The FDA's 10-year delay in approving alprenolol, a beta-blocker, sold for three years in Europe, cost more than 10,000 lives per year. The three-year delay in the approval of misoprostol, a drug for the treatment of gastric bleeding that cost between 8,000 and 15,000 lives per year. The lag in the approval of streptokinase for the treatment of occluded coronary arteries cost more than 10,000 lives per year.

FDA erring on the side of over-caution makes the average cost of bringing a drug to the market close to $1 billion. When an FDA official proudly announces the approval of a major new drug, someone should ask him: If this drug is going to start saving lives tomorrow, how many people died yesterday, last week, last month or last year waiting for the drug to be approved? A drug company CEO could give you the answer if he weren't fearful of FDA retaliation.

Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) represents Congress' way to force manufacturers to produce more fuel-efficient cars. Manufacturers meet CAFE standards by producing lighter weight and hence less crash-worthy cars. According to a Brookings Institution study, a 500-lb weight reduction of the average car increased annual highway fatalities by 2,200-3,900 and serious injuries by 11,000 and 19,500 per year. A National Highway Transportation and Safety Administration study demonstrated that reducing a vehicle's weight by only 100 pounds increased the fatality rate by as much as 5.63 percent for light cars, 4.70 percent for heavier cars and 3.06 percent for light trucks. These rates translated into additional traffic fatalities of 13,608 for light cars, 10,884 for heavier cars and 14,705 for light trucks between 1996 and 1999.

Congressmen have full knowledge of these life and death statistics but doing the bidding of environmentalists and other interest groups is more important than American lives. There ought to be a way to make the invisible victims of Congress visible.

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Comments

g.wegmann

Dr. Williams your article shows another example of the bureaucrats opinion of the "Common Man"(aka."homer"). The government employees and the administration that supports and directs them is only interested in doing the bidding of their supporters, ie:ecologist freaks) at the polls, so they can stay in power!

Posted October 13, 2010 at 9:21:52 AM


john

I would think that the environmentalist agenda (for some small fraction of them) is obvious by now - I want to return the world to a pristine sttate so I can enjoy it. If that means getting rid of some odious beings (people) then so be it - as long as I am left to enjoy the fruits of my labors (genocide).

Posted October 13, 2010 at 1:10:08 PM


Chris Baker

I am one of these "invisible" victims of the FDA's overly cautious attitude. I used to weigh 355 pounds and started taking the Fen-Phen combination. Lost 10 pounds every month that I was on it. After it was taken off the market it took me 2 1/2 years to regain the weight I'd lost in 6 months. I later had gastric bypass surgery and have lost about 80 pounds. The death rate for the Fen-Phen was about 1 in 10,000. To get the same results by surgery I had to undergo an operation with a 1 in 300 death rate. It is still a constant struggle to maintain my weight loss where as under Fen-Phen I always went into the doctors office thinking there was no way I'd lost any weight and then there I was, 10 pounds lighter than the month before. I would go back on Fen-Phen right now if given the option. But the FDA says I can't do that. The bastards.

Posted October 13, 2010 at 3:08:41 PM


Brian

The problem with CAFE is that it is at odds with NHTSA. CAFE says "make cars get better mileage", NHTSA says "make cars safer". Safer cars are heavier, lighter cars get better mileage. It's a wonder that any company bothers to try to build a car in this environment.

Posted October 13, 2010 at 7:56:59 PM


Howard Last

Malaria was just about wiped out by the use of DDT, until the feds banned it. Now over a million people die by a disease that could be wiped out. Water borne diseases in the US are non existent thanks to the use of chlorine in municipal water treatment plants. Now some idiots (I am being kind) want to stop it.

Posted October 13, 2010 at 9:58:59 PM


Daryl

But of course, we are just the "little" people, you know, the ones who sweat, suffer, bleed, die, while the "smarter then us" live "larger then us" in Dc and environs.....

Posted October 13, 2010 at 10:52:07 PM


Gary

Read the book "That Which is Seen and That Which is not Seen", Frederich Bastiat. Past of this collection: http://mises.org/books/bastiat1.pdf. I love Walter Williams and Bastiat.

Chris Baker is not the only victim of Fen-Phen, lack of choice. Bariatric surgeries have one of the highest death rates and they are not cheap either, we all pay these costs in insurance, etc.

Liberals are pro-choice about a few things, conservatives are pro choice about others, Libertarians default to free-choice.

Posted October 14, 2010 at 12:55:53 PM


Gary

When this anti-FDA conversation arises, I say thalidomide. Recall the FDA kept it out and the rest of the world was having babies born without limbs.

Posted October 14, 2010 at 2:08:34 PM


BT

Gary -

ergo: one drug which caused unforeseen side effects to less than 10,000 babies worldwide over eleven years justifies the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people and untold BILLIONS of dollars wasted in bureaucratic lunacy?

Everyone wants safe drugs. But at what price sir? Every drug is safe for the dead.

It seems to be a law of nature, inflexible and inexorable, that those who will not risk cannot win.

----John Paul Jones (1747-1792)

Posted October 14, 2010 at 6:30:12 PM


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