Note to our readers: It is understandable why Merck wants the vaccine mandated. On June 5th, Fortune Magazine writer John Simons reported Merck would make $2-$4 billion dollars annually if the vaccine is mandated by the States. The shots, given three times over a 6 month period, will cost $360.00.
Drug firm pushes vaccine mandate
Merck lobbies on HPV vaccine
Associated Press
January
30, 2007
Merck & Co.
is helping to bankroll efforts to pass state laws requiring girls as young as 11
or 12 to receive the drugmaker's new vaccine against the sexually transmitted
cervical- cancer virus.
With at
least 18 states debating whether to require Merck's Gardasil vaccine for
schoolgirls, Merck has funneled money through Women in Government, an advocacy
group made up of female state legislators around the country. A top official
from Merck's vaccine division sits on Women in Government's business council,
and many of the bills around the country have been introduced by members of
Women in Government.
Susan
Crosby, president of Women in Government, which advocates school requirements
for the vaccine, said Merck is an information resource and provides
"unrestricted" grants so that her group determines the content of educational
efforts. The group doesn't disclose details about its corporate funding.
This arrangement enables Merck to promote its products to lawmakers through a
seemingly unbiased third party.
"This is a time-honored practice for companies to
underwrite these things so that they're basically buying platforms," said Bruce
F. Freed, co-director of the Center for Political Accountability, which
advocates transparency for corporate political activity. "Merck and Big Pharma
are doing this the way Big Tobacco has done it for years."
Cathie
Adams, president of the conservative watchdog group Texas Eagle Forum, said the
relationship between Merck and Women in Government is too cozy. "What it does is
benefit the pharmaceutical companies, and I don't want pharmaceutical companies
taking precedence over the authorities of parents," she said.
Adams said
Merck's method of lobbying quietly through groups like Women in Government in
addition to meeting directly with legislators are common in state government but
still should raise eyebrows. "It's corrupt as far as I'm concerned," she said.
Groups such
as the Maryland Family Protection Lobby also took issue with Merck's lobbying.
"If Merck
wants to come up with a drug and advertise it, and people want to buy it, that's
fine. I'm for capitalism," said Doug Stiegler, executive director of the group.
"What I don't want is for Merck to come to the state and say we want to make
millions of dollars from this, and we want you to mandate this for every
schoolgirl who comes down the pike."
Stiegler joins groups such as Focus on the Family, a politically active Christian organization, in opposing the mandate on the grounds that parents, not the government, should make such decisions.