http://www.toxicteeth.org/
We Win -- FDA Must Classify Mercury Fillings
We have won our ten-year battle to get the Food and Drug Administration to
comply with the law and set a date to classify mercury amalgam.
On Monday, we settled our lawsuit,
Moms Against Mercury et al.
v. Von Eschenbach, Commissioner, et al. FDA will finish classifying
within one year of the close of the public comment period on its amalgam policy,
that is, by July 28, 2009.
There's more good news. During a several hour negotiation session, FDA agreed to
change its website on amalgam -- dramatically. Gone, gone, gone are all of FDA's
claims that no science exists that amalgam is unsafe, or that other countries
have acted for environmental reasons only, or that the 2006 Scientific Panel
vote affirmed amalgam's safety. Instead -- see
http://www.fda.gov/cdrh/consumer/amalgams.html -- FDA
has moved to a neutral course, while recognizing the serious health concerns
posed by amalgam in particular for children and unborn children, for pregnant
women, for those with mercury immuno-sensitivity or high mercury body burdens.
FDA now states, for example:
"Dental amalgams contain mercury, which may have neurotoxic effects on
the nervous systems of developing children and fetus."
"Pregnant women and persons who may have a health condition that makes
them more sensitive to mercury exposure, including individuals with
existing high levels of mercury bioburden, should not avoid seeking
dental care, but should discuss options with their health practitioner."
Perfect? No. A 180-degree reversal from FDA's 30-year policy of protecting
mercury fillings? Absolutely.
To change FDA policy, we tried petitions, Congressional hearings, state fact
sheet laws, Scientific Advisory Committee hearings, and letters galore -- to no
avail. So in the great American tradition, we sued. The case came to a head this
spring. On April 22, working with Johann Wehrle and Gwen Smith, I filed a motion
for an injunction before Judge Ellen Huvelle. Three sets of briefs later, the
government and I presented our oral arguments on May 16. In a crucial ruling,
Judge Huvelle ruled that our 11 plaintiffs -- the diverse group listed below --
have standing. She said FDA should classify, and invited the two sides to
mediate. On May 30, before Magistrate Judge John Facciola, Bob Reeves (who flew
in from Lexington KY) and I hammered out an agreement with FDA officials and
lawyers.
The impact of the re-writing of its position on amalgam can hardly be
understated. FDA's website will no longer be cited by the American Dental
Association in public hearings. FDA shows awareness of the key issues involved.
As it prepares to classify amalgam, FDA has moved to a position of neutrality.
Indeed, having repeatedly raised the question of amalgam's risk to children,
young women, and the immuno-sensitive persons in its website, I find it
inconceivable that FDA will not in some way protect them in its upcoming rule.
Charlie Brown
3 June 2008
PS 1: Our talented (and pro bono publico)
legal team includes Consumers for Dental Choice president Sandy Duffy, Bob
Reeves, Johann Wehrle, Sandra Keech, Mike McClory, and Gwen Smith; Larry Pilot
served as legal advisor on the FDCA.
PS 2: Great appreciation to our gutsy plaintiffs, a team of four nonprofit
groups, two public officials, three dental professionals, and two consumer
victims: Moms Against Mercury (Amy Carson and Angela Medlin), Connecticut
Coalition for Environmental Justice (Dr. Mark Mitchell), Oregonians for Life
(Mary Starrett), mercury expert Michael Bender (in his capacity as Commissioner
of a Vermont advisory board on mercury), Arizona Senator Karen Johnson, Dr. Andy
Landerman, Dr. Corrie Crowe, dental assistant Karen Palmer, consumer advocates
Linda Brocato and Anita Vazquez Tibau, and (of course) Consumers for Dental
Choice.
Charles G. Brown, National Counsel
Consumers for Dental Choice
316 F St., N.E., Suite 210, Washington, DC 20002
Ph. 202.544-6333; fax 202.544-6331
charlie@toxicteeth.org,
www.toxicteeth.org