Anonymous ID: fdadcb Aug. 21, 2022, 4:31 p.m. No.17424987   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4998 >>5054 >>5088 >>5110 >>5241 >>5339 >>5446 >>5562 >>5609 >>5617 >>5642

NIH Fails to Enforce Rules for Reporting Clinical Trial Results

 

A review by the US Office of Inspector General found that only about half of the scientists running clinical trials funded by the NIH in 2019 and 2020 appropriately recorded their findings in a federal database, as is legally required.

 

The US National Institutes of Health failed to ensure the timely reporting of results in roughly half of the clinical trials it funded in 2019 and 2020, including many overseen by NIH scientists, according to the findings of a new report released by the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General. In some cases, the agency allowed researchers who failed to meet these federal reporting requirements to launch new trials as well, drawing intense criticism from research transparency advocates and at least one former director of ClinicalTrials.gov, the federal database in which scientists are legally required to post updates on clinical research.

 

“NIH has severely let down patients and taxpayers since 2007, when trial reporting first became mandatory,” Till Bruckner, the founder of Transparimed, a group that tracks issues pertaining to clinical trial transparency, tells STAT News. “As this report documents, NIH for over a decade turned a blind eye to violations, and even rewarded law-breakers by handing them even more public money so they could run more trials with more patients.”

 

In 2018, the US Office of Inspector General (OIG) conducted a small probe to determine whether the NIH—which funds much of the clinical work conducted in the US—was sufficiently enforcing federal regulations that require researchers to publish their results within one year of an estimated or actual completion date. In a brief statement describing its justification for the new report, the OIG stated that “our preliminary review of data from ClinicalTrials.gov showed that most NIH-funded clinical trials that were completed in calendar year 2018 did not have their results posted.” The findings were troubling enough that the office began a more substantive analysis of trials carried out in 2019 and 2020.

The new report revealed that of the 72 trials analyzed, which included a roughly equal proportion of trials run by NIH scientists and by outside investigators, only 35 studies reported their results within the required timeframe. Of the 37 trials that did not report their results, 43 percent were led by NIH scientists. And at least 21 investigators began a new NIH-funded clinical trial before submitting the late results of their previous clinical trials; Of those, a little less than half were employed by the NIH, while the rest were carried out by outside researchers.

 

Typically, an office within the NIH sends notices to agency scientists who fail to meet their reporting deadlines. But STAT reports that the same office often failed to follow up with researchers who still didn’t report their findings, and the agency appears to have done little to address complaints by clinicians that the ClinicalTrials.gov database can be difficult to use.

 

Deborah Zarin, a former director of ClinicalTrials.gov, tells STAT that the persistence of this issue is troubling. The report’s findings come amidst an ongoing push to make trial results more transparent and to hold pharmaceutical companies, universities, and medical centers accountable for meeting their obligations. Zarin says that “in this context, it is disappointing and indeed shocking that NIH continues to emphasize the difficulty of posting results, rather than the scientific value and imperative to do so. I hope that this OIG report is a wake up call to both NIH and the scientific community.”

 

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/nih-fails-to-enforce-rules-for-reporting-clinical-trial-results-70392

 

IG Report

file:///C:/Users/Craig/Downloads/62107000.pdf

Anonymous ID: fdadcb Aug. 21, 2022, 4:33 p.m. No.17424993   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5054 >>5088 >>5110 >>5241 >>5339 >>5446 >>5562 >>5609 >>5617 >>5642

Indiana Governor Latest US Official to Visit Taiwan Amid China Tensions

 

TAIPEI—The governor of Indiana arrived in Taipei on Sunday, becoming the latest U.S. official to visit Taiwan and defying pressure from the Chinese regime for such trips not to happen.

 

The Chinese communist regime, which claims democratically-governed Taiwan as its own territory despite the Taipei government’s strong objections, has been carrying out war games and drills near Taiwan since U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi made a two-day visit to Taipei earlier this month.

 

Last week a second group of U.S. lawmakers visited Taiwan.

 

Gov. Eric Holcomb wrote on Twitter that he would also be visiting South Korea, while Taiwan’s presidential office said he would meet President Tsai Ing-wen on Monday morning.

 

“I’m energized to spend this week building new relationships, reinforcing long time ones and strengthening key sector partnerships with Taiwan and South Korea,” Holcomb wrote on Twitter.

 

He termed his visit to Taiwan and South Korea an “economic development trip”, saying he was the first U.S. governor to come to Taiwan since the COVID-19 pandemic began more than two years ago.

 

“Our delegation will spend this week meeting with government officials, business leaders, and academic institutions to further strengthen Indiana’s economic, academic and cultural connections with Taiwan and South Korea,” Holcomb wrote in a tweet.

 

There was no immediate response from the Chinese regime to his arrival.

 

Taiwan’s Foreign Ministry said Holcomb would also meet representatives from Taiwanese semiconductor companies, although it gave no details, and would sign various trade and technology memorandums of understanding.

 

Taiwan is home to the world’s largest contact chip maker, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (TSMC), which is building a $12 billion plant in the U.S. state of Arizona.

 

The Chinese regime says Taiwan is the most important and sensitive issue in its relations with Washington, and that it considers anything to do with the island an internal issue.

 

Taiwan’s government says that as the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has never ruled the island it has no right to claim it, and that only Taiwan’s 23 million people can decide their future.

 

China’s military drills have been continuing around Taiwan, though on a smaller scale than the war games conducted immediately after the trip by Pelosi, the highest level U.S. official to visit in decades.

 

https://www.ntd.com/indiana-governor-latest-us-official-to-visit-taiwan-amid-china-tensions_828387.html

Anonymous ID: fdadcb Aug. 21, 2022, 4:35 p.m. No.17425002   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Leader of Top Teachers' Union Took in More Than $500K While Battling for COVID School Closures, Tax Forms Reveal

 

New documents reveal that the president of the nation’s largest teachers’ union — a leader who fought against reopening schools during the COVID pandemic — was raking in big bucks while showering liberal groups with cash.

 

National Education Association President Becky Pringle earned $534,243 in compensation between September 2020 – when she was named to her post — and August 2021, NEA tax forms show.

 

That was an increase of $25,000 from the previous calendar year.

 

“Becky Pringle lined her pockets with over half a million dollars and peddled politics at the expense of returning to in-person learning,” Caitland Sutherland, executive director of Americans for Public Trust, said, according to Fox News Digital.

 

Sutherland provided the tax forms to Fox News Digital.

 

“Children are still feeling the catastrophic effects of prolonged school closures, all because teacher union leaders wrote the guidance that kept our schools closed,” she said. “This is politics at its worst.”

 

The tax documents further reveal that the NEA gave millions to liberal groups and funded unions, according to Fox.

 

The NEA shipped $200,000 to the Democracy Alliance, a left-wing group co-founded by George Soros that helps develop the Democratic Party’s positions.

 

The NEA sent $100,000 to the Strategic Victory Fund, which helped progressive campaigns, and $1.2 million into the State Engagement Fund, which sends cash to progressive non-profits.

 

The NEA’s progressive push also has sent money to the Center for American Progress, America Votes, Emerging American Majorities, Sixteen Thirty Fund, Voto Latino, and Race & Equity in Education.

 

The New Jersey Education Association received $6.1 million.

 

As noted by Fox News, the New Jersey affiliate has taken out ads condemning parents who become involved in school boards and education issues.

 

“When extremists start attacking our schools, that’s not who we are,” the ad says. “People who only want to fight to score political points should take that somewhere else.”

 

From the start, Pringle pushed back against efforts to reopen schools that were shuttered by COVID-19 lockdowns, according to Politico.

 

https://www.westernjournal.com/leader-top-teachers-union-took-500k-battling-covid-school-closures-tax-forms-reveal/

Anonymous ID: fdadcb Aug. 21, 2022, 5:41 p.m. No.17425205   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5241 >>5339 >>5446 >>5562 >>5609 >>5617 >>5642

Senator Pushes Feds For Source of Vaccine at Military Bases Amid Whistleblower Allegations

 

After a whistleblower report was sent to Congress last week regarding recent COVID vaccine shipments to Coast Guard medical clinics, Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wisc.) is asking for answers.

 

Just the News reports:

 

On Monday, nine military officers from across all the branches sent a whistleblower report to Congress regarding a COVID vaccine appearing at Coast Guard medical clinics.

 

Although labeled as Pfizer’s fully-FDA approved Comirnaty vaccine, the vaccine does not appear to have been manufactured in Belgium as is legally required per its FDA approval letter, according to the whistleblowers, and may actually be the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine that’s under emergency use authorization.

 

The military can only legally force service members to receive vaccines that are fully approved by the FDA, not those under FDA emergency use authorization. However, service members who have been denied religious exemptions from the military’s vaccine mandate are being forced out of the military, despite only emergency use authorization vaccines being made available.

 

Thus far, federal judges in various court cases have granted preliminary injunctions against the vaccine mandates in the Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps for service members seeking religious exemptions.

 

The Gateway Pundit recently shared a troubling report of vaccine injuries that have occurred in the US Military. The report shares examples of adverse effects on members of the military of the vaccine mandate, of the vaccine itself on members, as well as the implications for national security.

 

Across each branch, hundreds of thousands of service members stand to be discharged for being in noncompliance with the mandates. The DoD has continuously downplayed these numbers while refusing to acknowledge the health risks the vaccines pose, and the detrimental impact to military end strength and national security. However, by comparing the DoD end strength numbers to the DOD’s vaccination data, the total number of service members that are either unvaccinated or partially vaccinated equates to an upwards of 350,000, many of whom are now facing discharge for noncompliance. For perspective, during WWII, the United States lost 405,399 service members to combat, disease, or mishap. Of the more than 16 million that served, about 2.5% of those service members did not come home. Currently, the military is pursuing the discharge of nearly five times that percentage for the 2.3 million service members in the ongoing purge by the DoD. Even the DoD’s own data shows those in noncompliance as high as 13% within Army National Guard. Under Secretary Lloyd Austin’s policies, we are likely to discharge military members at a higher rate to the COVID vaccine mandate policies, a so called “policy casualty,” than to our combat casualties in WWII.

 

Despite these pending “policy casualties” to the military, Secretary Austin still demands a fully vaccinated force. This, ironically, as Navy warships remain docked and unable to deploy due to COVID outbreaks among crews with 100% vaccination rates.The impending question the DoD must address is this: Since the injections do not prevent infection, do not prevent transmission, are potentially causing more harm through under reported injuries, and likely contributing to the largest recruitment and retention issues in decades, then how is this policy preserving the health and readiness of our military. The clear answer is that Secretary Austin’s policy is in fact achieving the opposite, and it must be abandoned; quickly.

 

https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2022/08/senator-pushes-feds-source-vaccine-military-bases-amid-whistleblower-allegations/

Anonymous ID: fdadcb Aug. 21, 2022, 6:05 p.m. No.17425282   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5339 >>5446 >>5562 >>5609 >>5617 >>5642

National security review of Darwin Port to remain secret, but Defence releases 'talking points'

 

A national security review of a Chinese-owned company's lease of Darwin Port will remain secret, after the Defence Department refused a Freedom of Information request for its findings.

Key points:

 

In 2015, the NT government leased the port to Landbridge for 99 years in a $506 million deal

Last year, the Coalition asked Defence to assess national security implications of the lease

The findings were never publicly released, and Labor has now commissioned its own review

 

Instead, a series of "talking points" given to the former Coalition government have been released, shedding light on the range of questions it expected to face, and how they should be answered.

 

Chinese-owned company Landbridge signed a 99-year lease for the strategically important asset in 2015, prompting security concerns about the $500 million arrangement.

 

In May last year — amid escalating tensions with the Chinese government — the then defence minister Peter Dutton confirmed the National Security Committee of Cabinet had tasked his department with providing new security advice, and assessing the implications of the controversial lease.

 

Seven months later, in late December, media reports suggested Defence had identified no concerns sufficient to revoke the lease.

 

However, the review was never publicly released.

 

The ABC sought access to the review following the election of the Labor government in May this year.

 

But Defence has refused to release 10 documents that fell within the scope of the request, including two "risk assessments" conducted in 2021 and a "presentation" prepared in February this year.

 

Defence said the material was exempt because it had been created for cabinet.

 

It said it had consulted with the Department of Prime Minister and cabinet, which supported its decision.

 

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-08-22/nt-darwin-port-foi/101354854