Climate
Scammers Prepare to Sacrifice Some Impoverished Asthmatics
by
Vin Suprynowicz
by Vin Suprynowicz
DIGG THIS
As usual,
it was initially reported as unmitigated happy news.
Your
Metered-Dose Inhaler is Changing to Help Improve the Environment,
is how the U.S. Food and Drug Administration chooses to present
word that the inhalers used by those who suffer from asthma and
other respiratory ailments are being pulled from the shelves as
of Jan. 1.
Back in 1987,
representatives of the federal government signed the Montreal
Protocol, in which 27 major industrialized nations agreed
to halve their use of chlorofluorocarbon gases, which some believe
could damage the earths ozone layer.
Real-world
experiments to prove the theory have been in short supply
its hard to imagine how one would be devised, since it would
first have to be shown how chlorofluorocarbons, which tend to be
heavier than air, could reach the ozone layer in the first place.
Nor did the
Montreal deal actually call for banning the propellant from the
inhalers, since that use represents only about 1.5 percent of all
CFC uses (it was less than 1.0 percent at the time), and signatory
nations get to choose what uses to change. (Car air-conditioning
systems were the first use targeted Greens hate cars
whereas the Environmental Protection Agency saw no immediate need
to go after document-preservation sprays, foam insulation for coaxial
cable, or CFC-based fire extinguishers.)
But the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration ruled the switch would be mandatory
as soon as a viable replacement could be marketed.
So 22.9 million
American asthma sufferers now face a changeover to more expensive
brand-name alternatives that use the environmentally friendlier
propellant hydrofluoralkane which can be three times as expensive,
raising the cost to about $40 per inhaler.
Why not wait
to make the change after generic alternatives become available?
Skeptics point out that changing now could mean billions more dollars
for the three drug companies that hold patents on the replacement
HFA-albuterol inhalers, according to Emily Harrison, writing in
the August issue of Scientific American.
At least one
member of the FDA advisory committee, Nicholas J. Gross of the Stritch-Loyola
School of Medicine, has publicly regretted the decision, recanting
his support and requesting that the ban be pushed back until 2010,
when the first patent expires, Ms. Harrison wrote.
Meantime, multiple
studies have shown that raising costs leads to poorer adherence
to treatment; one study found that patients took 30 percent less
anti-asthma medication, for instance, when their co-pay doubled.
There are also concerns about patients getting proper instruction
on use of the new inhalers, which need to be primed more often than
the old models, and which also tend to clog and need to be cleaned
more often.
Considering
that asthma and other respiratory diseases disproportionately strike
the poor, is it possible that what seemed to be a good, responsible
environmental decision might in the end exact an unexpected human
toll leading to more asthma deaths? How should that risk
be weighed against the risk of the chlorofluorocarbons to the ozone
layer, and the subsequent health risks to all mankind?
To answer that
question, wed need to know whether CFCs really damage the
ozone layer, and by how much the kind of real-world scientific
data (as opposed to jury-rigged computer models, dubbed GIGOs
in the trade) that the radical greens show little patience for gathering,
prone as they are to shout: The debate is over! No time to
dilly-dally! By the time we know, itll be too late!
Funny how that
always works out.
January
3, 2009
Vin
Suprynowicz [send
him mail] is assistant editorial page editor of the daily Las
Vegas Review-Journal and author of The
Black Arrow.
Copyright
© 2009 Vin Suprynowicz
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