http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,361521,00.html

Jesus and the FDA

BY KAREN TUMULTY 

Saturday, Oct. 05, 2002
A quiet battle is raging over the Bush Administration's plan to appoint a
scantily credentialed doctor, whose writings include a book titled As
Jesus Cared for Women: Restoring Women Then and Now, to head an
influential Food and Drug Administration (FDA) panel on women's health
policy. Sources tell Time that the agency's choice for the advisory panel
is Dr. W. David Hager, an obstetrician-gynecologist who also wrote, with
his wife Linda, Stress and the Woman's Body, which puts "an emphasis on
the restorative power of Jesus Christ in one's life" and recommends
specific Scripture readings and prayers for such ailments as headaches
and premenstrual syndrome. Though his resume describes Hager as a
University of Kentucky professor, a university official says Hager's
appointment is part time and voluntary and involves working with interns
at Lexington's Central Baptist Hospital, not the university itself. In
his private practice, two sources familiar with it say, Hager refuses to
prescribe contraceptives to unmarried women. Hager did not return several
calls for comment. 
FDA advisory panels often have near-final say over crucial health
questions. If Hager becomes chairman of the 11-member Reproductive Health
Drugs Advisory Committee, he will lead its study of hormone-replacement
therapy for menopausal women, one of the biggest controversies in health
care. Some conservatives are trying to use doubts about such therapy to
discredit the use of birth-control pills, which contain similar
compounds. The panel also made the key recommendation in 1996 that led to
approval of the "abortion pill," RU-486�a decision that abortion foes are
still fighting. Hager assisted the Christian Medical Association last
August in a "citizens' petition" calling upon the FDA to reverse itself
on RU-486, saying it has endangered the lives and health of women. 
Hager was chosen for the post by FDA senior associate commissioner Linda
Arey Skladany, a former drug-industry lobbyist with longstanding ties to
the Bush family. Skladany rejected at least two nominees proposed by FDA
staff members: Donald R. Mattison, former dean of the University of
Pittsburgh School of Public Health, and Michael F. Greene, director of
maternal- fetal medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital. Despite
pressure from inside the FDA to make the appointment temporary, sources
say, Skladany has insisted that Hager get a full four-year term. FDA
spokesman Bill Pierce called Hager "well qualified." 

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