<<http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/05/1542206>>

Scientific McCarthyism: Is The Bush Administration Compiling a Hit List
of AIDS Scientists?

A list of over 150 scientists researching a wide range of topics related
to health and sexuality, including HIV/AIDS, has been compiled and given
to federal officials by a conservative advocacy group and is being used
in attempts to discredit the researchers and challenge or revoke their
federal grants. 
The list of about $100 million in grants was prepared last summer by the
Traditional Values Coalition, which claims to represent 43,000 churches
nationwide. 

The list is being used by the coalition and its government allies in
attempts to discredit the researchers and challenge or revoke their
federal grants. The list is circulating among members of Congress and was
forwarded to the National Institutes of Health (NIH), which is
responsible for awarding the crucially important grants. NIH is now
asking these scientists to provide additional justification for their
work. 

Last week, Democratic Rep. Henry A. Waxman of California denounced the
list as an ideologically driven "hit list." In a to Health Secretary
Tommy Thompson, Waxman said officials within HHS itself appear to have
been directly involved in the list’s creation and demanded an
explanation. 


Alfred Sommer, dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health and professor of Epidemiology, International Health, and
Ophthalmology. 
Judith Auerbach, is Vice President, Public Policy at the American
Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR). Until recently she headed the
Office of AIDS Research at the National Institutes of Health (NIH).


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TRANSCRIPT 
AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, The War and Peace Report. I'm Amy
Goodman. A list of over 150 scientist researching a wide range of topics
relating to health and sexuality, including HIV and AIDS, sexually
transmitted diseases and adolescent sexual behavior has been compiled and
given to federal officials by a conservative advocacy group. The list of
about $150 million in grants was prepared last summer by the Traditional
Values Coalition, which claims to represent 43,000 churches nationwide.
The list is being used by the Coalition and its government allies in
attempts to discredit the researchers and challenge or revoke their
federal grants. The list is circulating among members of Congress and was
forwarded to the National Institutes of Health which is responsible for
awarding the crucially important grants. N.I.H. is asking the scientists
to provide additional justification for their work.

Last week, Democratic Congress member Henry Wachsman of California
denounced the list as an ideological driven hit list. In a letter to
Health Secretary Tommy Thompson, Wachsman said officials within H.H.S.
itself appear to have been directly involved in the list's creation.
We’re going to turn now to Judy Auerbach, Vice President for Public
Policy at American Foundation for AIDS Research, known as AMFAR. Until
recently, she headed the Office of AIDS Research at the National
Institutes of Health. Welcome to Democracy Now!.

JUDY AUERBACH: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you start off by talking about what is known at this
point about who has been targeted, how these lists were compiled?

JUDY AUERBACH: The list that is getting all this attention is as you
mentioned, the list of over 200 grants and 150 or 180 grantees. And it
appears to have been compiled by the Traditional Values Coalition. That's
whose claiming credit for it. It's wrapped up in a larger set of
activities that are all around sending inquiries to the National
Institutes of Health about specific research projects and specific
researchers involved in studies around HIV and AIDS, sexuality, and
related matters. The list itself appears to have been a work in progress,
as you mentioned in your introduction.

In fact, the $100 million total that's being referenced is a little
misleading because the list includes some grants that are defunct and in
fact includes some names of people who are deceased. It's a bizarre list
to begin with, and we shouldn't fixate too much on the list, but in the
larger context of what's happening around the scrutiny of peer reviewed,
approved and funded grants in public health.

AMY GOODMAN: I should say that we ask the Traditional Values Coalition to
join us. They declined. Also called the National Institutes of Health as
well. What about when these grants are being discussed within the N.I.H.?
People have said that Bush administration officials are sitting in on
these meetings. Do you know anything about this, Judy?

JUDY AUERBACH: I know a little bit about that, yes. The way the funds are
funded, I'm not sure how much people are aware of the process. It's
rigorous and complex. I'll try to simplify. If you are a researcher, you
have a good scientific idea up. You submit a proposal to conduct research
and you describe your methodology and the theoretical basis for your
study and how you propose to do the work. That grant goes to the N.I.H.
The N.I.H. constructs panels or groups of reviewers to look at the
scientific merits of that research. Those are scientific experts. Those
are purported to be your peers. That's the appropriate way we have
conducted scientific review for many, many, many years. And those review
-- the review groups meet on a regular basis. When they meet, their
meetings are essentially closed to the public, because the information
they're discussing is proprietary. It's your intellectual property and
there's some decisions that are going to be made about funding. Those
groups are not open to the public. They're open to the members of the
review group and the administrators of the groups as well as N.I.H.
staff, who would be managing the grants once they're awarded. If they're
award. What's happened in the last eight months or so is that other
federal employees have begun showing up at these reviews.

They're allowed to -- they legally are allowed to, but it's very
unprecedented to have people who do not have a direct relationship to the
review or the awarding or the management of the grants to sit in on those
peer reviews. And the perception amongst the people who are the reviewers
and the N.I.H. staff is that these folks have been sent to monitor the
discussion, to take notes on it, the grantees. The reviewers themselves
are getting nervous they're going to be on a list of people who are
sympathetic to certain kinds of research or not. And so, it's a mystery
and it's created a sense of concern amongst the folks because -- who
participate in the review process because it is really unprecedented, and
it's not clear what the purpose of this is.

AMY GOODMAN: What do you think of Congress member Wachsman's allegation
that the list was not just compiled by the conservative advocacy group,
but was provided information by the Department of Health and Human
Services Secretary Tommy Thompson.

JUDY AUERBACH: I think it's easy to think that when you look at the list
and there are notations. I have seen this list. There are notations
throughout that refer to something being or not being on the H.H.H.
search or not found on an H.H.S. search or not found in H.H.S. data. It
looks to Mr. Wachsman and others as if the department either asked the
Traditional Values Coalition or helped the Traditional Values Coalition,
or whoever compiled this list, to do so, although it's not
straightforward and we don't know that for certain. But as I said at the
beginning, I think that this has to be put in the larger -- this list has
to be put in a larger con text in which there have been a series of
similar kinds of inquiries that come through certain members of Congress,
in particular, to the N.I.H., identifying -- you know, whether it's one,
five, ten or 200 grants, the fact that they're asking the N.I.H. to
rejustify grants that have already been peer reviewed, approved and
funded. These awards have already been made. The research is already in
progress. Based on what appear to be ideological and political sectarian
concerns, rather than scientific concerns, is just really not acceptable.

AMY GOODMAN: Judy Auerbach, we have just reached Dean Alfred Summer, Dean
of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Health, Professor of [unclear] and
Epidemiology, at the airport headed to Hong Kong. We just have a minute,
Dean Summer, of the more than 200 grants on the list, more than a dozen
scientists are at Johns Hopkins medical and public health schools. What
are you doing about this?

DEAN ALFRED SUMMER: We're watching the situation carefully. We are
reassuring our investigators that what they have done is entirely
above-board, that their research, like all of the research we do -- has
undergone the usual scrutiny, as Judy Auerbach has already described the
process, and that we would be quite concerned if anything was done that
would jeopardize conducting what is essential public health research that
has been approved through the traditional N.I.H. peer review process.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to thank you both for being with us. Judith Auerbach,
now with AMFAR, the American Foundation for AIDS Research, used to head
up the Office of AIDS Research at the National Institutes of Health and
Dean Alfred Summer of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. 


-----
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

 -Life in Hell (Matt Groening)

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