Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) on Thursday penned a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius demanding an explanation of reports that Wall St. firms received many doses of the swine flu vaccine.
On Monday,
BusinessWeek reported that 13 corporations including bailed out investment banks Citigroup and Goldman Sachs had received over 1,400 doses of the scarce flu vaccine. 42 million Americans who are at high-risk for the virus while 35 million doses of the vaccine have been distributed. Hospitals and clinics have reported shortages of the vaccine.
"It is hard to believe that at a time when even the most vulnerable in our society are unable to obtain H1N1 vaccinations, the government is sending doses to private firms on Wall Street," said Dodd in the letter. "People are frustrated by the government’s response to this crisis, and with news like this, who can blame them?"
On the other side of the Hill, Energy and Commerce Health Subcommittee chairman Frank Pallone (D-N.J.) said he would hold a hearing on the issue on Nov. 18. Dodd is a senior member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP) Committee.
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Liberal groups such as the Service Employees International Union criticized the distribution of the vaccines to Wall St. firms.
A Goldman Sachs spokesman said the company intended to distribute the vaccine to high-risk individuals. But Dodd called on the Department of Health and Human Services to "review its policies to ensure that healthy stockbrokers aren't using doses meant for pregnant women and schoolchildren."
According to the Centers for Disease Control and the World Health Organization, children, young adults, the elderly, and pregnant women are among the high-risk population.
Dodd also said that the firms should return the vaccination doses they have already received.
Full letter after the jump:
November 5, 2009
The Honorable Kathleen Sebelius
Secretary, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Hubert H. Humphrey Building
200 Independence Avenue, SW
Washington, DC 20201
Dear Secretary Sebelius:
Like many Americans, I was stunned to hear news reports that private Wall Street companies were able to obtain H1N1 vaccines when hospitals in New York (and in my home state of Connecticut) do not have the vaccines they need to immunize priority populations. Every day, I am receiving phone calls and letters from constituents in Connecticut about the difficulties they are facing with obtaining the H1N1 vaccine. Schools in my state have closed; hospitals and health clinics report widespread shortages. It is shocking to think that private firms would be prioritized ahead of hospitals when the vaccine supply cannot meet the demand.
In 2006, Congress passed the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act in order to better prepare our nation’s states and cities for a pandemic much like we are seeing today with the H1N1 virus. Under that Act, the Secretary is charged with distributing and overseeing grants to states and localities to increase the preparedness, response capabilities, and surge capacity of hospitals, other health care facilities (including mental health facilities), and trauma care and emergency medical service systems, with respect to public health emergencies, which includes developing plans for rapid distribution and administration of medical countermeasures and protecting health care workers and first responders from workplace exposures during a public health emergency.
In addition, these grants must take into consideration the needs of at-risk individuals, defined as children, pregnant women, and senior citizens and other individuals who have special needs in the event of a public health emergency, as determined by the Secretary. What process has the Department of Health and Human Services undertaken to ensure that grantees meet the criteria established by Congress? In light of the news regarding Goldman Sachs and other Wall Street firms, what actions does the Department intend to take with respect to New York City? What audit authority does the Department currently have? And how can we be certain that doses that should be going to pregnant women and schoolchildren are not instead being used by less vulnerable people who happen to work on Wall Street?
I have also heard reports that states and localities were not made aware of the Department’s plans for H1N1 distribution until August. Is that accurate? Why did the Department wait so long to make this decision and when and how was this decision communicated to the states and localities to enable them to plan locally?
As you are well aware, the difficulties in H1N1 vaccine production and distribution and the resulting limited vaccine supply, poses a serious public health threat. As of last Friday, Connecticut had only received 187,000 doses of the H1N1 vaccine, although 500,000 doses had been expected by the middle of last month. With the demand for vaccine far exceeding the supply, it is difficult for citizens in my state, and around the country, to hear about private firms receiving vaccines before hospitals.
I urge you to take immediate steps to provide whatever assistance or guidance may be necessary to help states and cities obtain more vaccines for their populations.
And I implore you to use whatever authorities you have to ensure that H1N1 vaccines already distributed but not yet used are promptly redirected to hospitals, schools, community health clinics, school-based health clinics, and pediatricians so that they can be made immediately available to at-risk members of the public as identified by the Department.
I am prepared to help provide you with whatever legal authorities you may need to ensure that grantees of the federal government fully comply with the Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness Act and the guidelines of the Department for this public health emergency.
I appreciate your urgent attention to this important matter.
Sincerely,
CHRISTOPHER J. DODD
United States Senator
Just another day in rudderless America.