Former CDC director to head Merck's vaccine division, Gardasil

December 29th, 2009 by Kurt Niland

gerberding 100x100 Former CDC director to head Mercks vaccine division, Gardasil and Co. announced yesterday that Dr. Julie Gerberding, the former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, will head the pharmaceutical giant’s vaccine division. Dr. Gerberding served as the CDC director from 2002 to 2009, stepping down when President Barack Obama took office.

As head of ’s $5 billion global vaccine arm, Dr. Gerberding will likely be responsible for revitalizing ’s waning sales. won FDA approval for the vaccine in 2007 and immediately launched an aggressive campaign to make shots mandatory for school girls as young as 11. However, the ambitious plan ultimately failed, thanks to the outcry of consumer and health advocates who challenged the vaccine’s safety profile.

Other critics say that the vaccine is useless and that its risks exceed its benefits.

Dr. Charlotte Haug, the editor-in-chief of the Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association criticized in an editorial published last month in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

“Whether a risk is worth taking depends not only on the absolute risk, but on the relationship between the potential risk and the potential benefit. If the potential benefits are substantial, most individuals would be willing to accept the risks. But the net benefit of the vaccine to a woman is uncertain. Even if persistently infected with , a woman most likely will not develop cancer if she is regularly screened…”

Dr. Diane Harper, the lead researcher in vaccine development, announced at a conference in October that she considered a useless vaccine, and that ’s efforts in pushing the vaccine amount to what she called “a great big public health experiment.”

’s side effects include fainting, redness and inflammation at the vaccination site, dizziness, and fever. However, the most dangerous side effect reported so far has been an increase in the risk and rate of blood clots. According to JAMA, blood clots resulting from may have caused 32 unconfirmed deaths so far.

sales have been floundering recently, down 22 percent in the third quarter at $311 million.

Dr. Gerberding’s controversial tenure at the CDC was rife with allegations that she put party politics before science and public health, and that her strategic decisions crippled the agency’s ability to respond effectively to public health crises. In December 2005, five former CDC directors jointly wrote a letter to Dr. Gerberding, expressing alarm over the departure of key staff members and warning that her leadership jeopardized the agency’s ability to perform effectively.

If the concerns of the CDC’s former directors and leading scientists are valid, then Dr. Gerberding may be the right person to shore up ’s place in the drug market.

“As a preeminent authority in public health, infectious diseases and vaccines, Dr. Gerberding is the ideal choice to lead ’s engagement with organizations around the world that share our commitment to the use of vaccines to prevent disease and save lives,” Chief Executive Officer Richard Clark said in a statement.

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