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PRESS RELEASE
July 28, 2005
www.breastimplantinfo.org
www.center4research.org
CONTACT: Hydi Miller
202-223-4000
hm@center4research.org
Statement of Dr. Diana Zuckerman, President of National Research Center for Women & Families
WASHINGTON, July 28 /PRNewswire --The Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) has issued an "approvable letter" to Mentor regarding their
silicone gel breast implants. This does not mean that these implants
have been approved, but it is a warning sign that corporate pressure
on the FDA has once again put women's health at risk.
The FDA letter is a stumbling step in the wrong direction, amid mounting questions about FDA decision-making. Approval would be an embarrassment unless the Senate and the FDA give Mentor a "clean bill of health" after thoroughly investigating allegations that Mentor misrepresented the rupture rate of its implants.
A Senate investigation
of the Mentor safety data and the FDA approval process is currently
underway, and concerns are growing. Just before the FDA announcement
today, key women members of the U.S. Senate sent a letter to the FDA
Commissioner, expressing their strong concerns about the lack of safety
data on silicone gel breast implants. And, as the public learns about
defective pacemakers, recalls of defibrillators and the dangers of several
other medical devices, questions still remain as to how safe these breast
implants are.
Every week we hear from women with leaking breast implants, who can't
afford the surgery to have them removed. FDA needs to make sure that
they don't approve a product that adds to this frightening situation
for so many women across the country.
The FDA needs to listen to its scientists and demand more long-term
safety data before issuing any kind of decision. They also need to make
sure that the data they are given are accurate. The credibility of the
FDA is on the line, as is the health of millions of women.
Dr. Diana Zuckerman is the president of the National Research
Center for Women & Families, a nonprofit research and education
organization that works to improve policies and programs that affect
the health and safety of women, children, and families. Dr. Zuckerman
is a nationally-recognized health policy expert with post-doctoral
training in epidemiology from Yale Medical School. She was on the
faculty of Vassar and Yale, and a researcher at Harvard, prior to
becoming a Congressional investigator in the U.S. House of Representatives,
where she initiated the first Congressional hearing on the lack
of safety data on breast implants, held in 1990. She is widely quoted
on a wide range of health issues, especially FDA and medical products.
For more information about the Center's work, see http://www.center4research.org
and http://www.breastimplantinfo.org.
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