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August 1, 2008 3:18 PM

Learning From a Previous Vaccine-Autism Case?

(CBS/AP)
Last fall, the federal government (which defends vaccines in cases before the federal vaccine court) conceded the case of Hannah Poling: one of nine autism "test cases" before the special court. The implications have been the subject of much debate. Government officials and some scientists portray the case as an exception without much meaning in the global picture.

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Tags:
Government ,
Previously ,
Court ,
Ordered ,
To ,
Pay ,
On ,
Other ,
cbsvaccinewatch ,
Injury ,
Cases ,
Hannah Poling
Topics:
Vaccine Watch
June 19, 2008 10:34 AM

Vaccine Watch

(AP)
After a decade of denying any possible association between vaccines and autism, the government quietly settled a vaccine-autism case last fall. When news of the case leaked out to the public months later, government officials labelled the case of Hannah Poling an "anomoly." The truth is, nobody is in a position to know whether Hannah's case is an exception.

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Tags:
denying ,
vaccine ,
autism ,
case ,
government ,
Hannah ,
Poling
Topics:
Vaccine Watch
May 25, 2007 3:15 PM

Want $5,000 To Decorate Your Office?

(CBS/AP/PHOTODISC)
Your curtains looking dull? Want to frame your diploma? Boost your ego wall? Too bad you’re not a Senate-confirmed presidential appointee.

CBS News has learned a little-known fact: presidential appointees are given an allowance of up to $5,000 to furnish or redecorate, buy furniture or make general improvements to their offices for the life of their appointment.

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Tags:
appointees ,
office ,
maps ,
furnish ,
spending
Topics:
Government Spending
May 10, 2007 6:49 PM

Homeland Security Transparency

(AP)
Congress has taken a step to shine a little more light on how our tax dollars are being spent to protect the homeland. The House of Representatives has passed a bill requiring public disclosure of counter-terrorism spending by states and cities receiving federal grants from the Department of Homeland Security, created in the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

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Tags:
DHS; Spending; Oversight
Topics:
Government Oversight
May 3, 2007 6:45 PM

Homeland Security Computer Boondoggle?

(CBS/AP)
The Department of Homeland Security has spent up to $71 million developing a vast, computerized information sharing system that many emergency responders across the country don't understand and don't use, according to a Government Accountability Office report obtained by CBS News. The Homeland Security Information Network (HSIN) is an internet-based, password-protected system that allows local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies to share information in real time as an emergency or disaster unfolds. But many officials tell CBS News they'd rather pick up the phone or be on the scene than manage emergencies from a keyboard.

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Tags:
Homeland Security; Boondogle; Information Network
Topics:
Government Oversight
March 29, 2007 4:15 PM

When is an e-mail from the White House not from the White House?

In the age of email, Oversight Committee Chairman Henry Waxman is keeping it old-school with his ongoing letter-writing campaign…actual letters, typed on paper that are in part aimed at getting to the bottom of White House email policies. Waxman, sent one letter today to Counsel to the President Fred Fielding and the second to Karl Rove.

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Tags:
White House; Waxman
Topics:
Government Oversight
March 27, 2007 3:09 PM

Stoves Tipping Over on Children

When stoves are installed in kitchens – there’s an optional bracket that can anchor the range to the floor – but in millions of homes it’s not installed. This leaves stoves from multiple manufacturers susceptible to tipping over if a child were to lean or climb on the stove door. According to the Consumer Products Safety Commission there have been 12 deaths to date from stoves toppling small children or the elderly –including one last fall that killed Alex Dustin Smith, a 17-month-old in Elmira, NY. Now, a House Congressional committee is investigating.

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Tags:
consumer product ,
government oversight ,
sears ,
stove
Topics:
Government Oversight
March 12, 2007 6:08 PM

One Soldier's Trip Through the Maze

(CBS)
When wounded soldiers come back from Iraq and Afghanistan, their families often end up trapped in a bureaucratic labyrinth. The CBS Investigative Team’s report on Sgt. Eric Edmundson shows that some families are forced to become their own full-time advocates.

Eric’s sister Anna Frese sent CBS News the stack of business cards her family collected throughout their bureaucratic odyssey- 107 cards high. Eric is now at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago – the best treatment facility for traumatic brain injury nationwide. And since he’s still on active duty, the Pentagon picks up the tab. But Frese estimates it took thousands of emails, three trips to Washington, endless meetings and hundreds of phone calls to get him there.

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Tags:
soldier ,
walter reed ,
traumatic brain injury ,
veterans administration
Topics:
Government Oversight
March 5, 2007 6:34 PM

Squeaky Wheel Gets the Care

It's well known that one of the best facilities in the world for traumatic brain injury is the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, also known as RIC. A senior congressional source says the challenge is for the Veterans Administration (VA) to figure out how to do what RIC does or give vouchers to soldiers so they can seek private treatment.

So far the facility has only treated one soldier from the Iraq war- his name is Spc. Eric Edmundson. Originally from Alaska, Edmundson was seriously injured in northern Iraq and sent to Walter Reed. But his father was dissatisfied with the care and pushed for his son to be transferred. He went to the VA Medical Center in Richmond, Virginia. Once there, Spc. Edmundson lost weight and his father, Ed Edmundson, complained again - apparently to the right people in Washington. Now his son has some of the best care in the world. He remains on active duty status even though his return to service in the near future is unlikely. By remaining active, all of his medical expenses can be paid for by the Pentagon.

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Tags:
soldier ,
walter reed ,
traumatic brain injury
Topics:
Government Oversight
February 13, 2007 9:45 PM

Snow Day Can't Cancel Ketek Story

We had a Snow Day on the Evening News tonight.

At this time of year weather is an important story, particularly given the unsettling mix of all the white stuff up North, the tornadoes down South and a brewing storm headed our way in the East. Not surprisingly, as I write this, weather is leading our broadcast, part of a “A” block chock full of stories pieces on North Korea, debate over the Iraq resolution in the House, and massive mall shooting in Utah. Busy, busy.

On almost any other night the story I worked on today would have made the show hands-down. It focused on a hearing in D.C. in which an insider blew the whistle on the drug manufacturer Sanofi Aventis, and alleged fraud in clinical trials involving its controversial antibiotic Ketek. My editors thought the script was strong (me too). The debate, as often happens, boiled down to a very few degrees. Was a story about Ketek, a drug used by about three million people last year for respiratory infections, more important than weather that could alter life for millions more?

Beyond the script I argued the Big Picture – a major drug manufacturer accused of knowingly passing along falsified drug data to the FDA and then coaching the head of its drug trials on how to deceive agency inspectors…

Guess what? A close call. But I lost. Snowed out by a snow day.

So we did what we often do – posted the piece here on the site. Only this time you get first look. I’d be interested to know what you think…

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Tags:
keteyian ,
Ketek ,
Sanofi Aventis ,
FDA
Topics:
Government Oversight

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Only a handful of the hundreds of stories on which we report make their way to the Evening News with Katie Couric. So we have created this space as another primary source to keep you informed.

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