Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 10:28 p.m. No.9821793   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1857 >>1917 >>1965

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Keystone

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Dr Fauci continued

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology_of_HIV/AIDS

 

HIV/AIDS, or Human Immunodeficiency Virus, is considered by some authors a global pandemic.[1] However, the WHO currently uses the term 'global epidemic' to describe HIV.[2] As of 2018, approximately 37.9 million people are infected with HIV globally.[3][3]

There were about 770,000 deaths from AIDS in 2018.

Currently as of 2019, there are 37.9 million cases of HIV world wide. Out of this amount, in June of 2019, there were 24 million people undergoing antiretroviral therapy.

 

A total of 32 million people have died to HIV since the outbreak began.

 

About 1 million people have died at the end of 2018

=

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACT_UP

AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP) is an international, grassroots political group working to end the AIDS pandemic. The group works to improve the lives of people with AIDS through direct action, medical research, treatment and advocacy, and working to change legislation and public policies.

 

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Fauci

https://archive.is/wip/5p3Iz

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anthony_Fauci#HIV/AIDS_epidemic

 

Fauci was one of the leading researchers during the AIDS epidemic in the early 1980s. In 1981 he heard of the virus, and he and his team of researchers began looking for a vaccine or treatment for this novel virus,

 

In October 1988 protesters came to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Fauci, who had become the institute's director in 1984, bore the brunt of the anger from the LGBTQ community, who felt ignored by the government.[1]

 

Larry Kramer, leading AIDS activist attacked Fauci relentlessly in the media. He called him an “incompetent idiot” and a “pill-pushing” tool of the medical establishment. Fauci did not have control over drug approval though many people felt he was not doing enough. Fauci did make an effort in the late 1980s to reach out to the gay community in New York and San Francisco to find ways he and the NIAID could find a solution.[1]

 

Though Fauci was first admonished for his treatment of the AIDS epidemic, his work in the community was eventually acknowledged and even Kramer, who spent years hating Fauci for his treatment of the HIV/AIDS epidemic, eventually called him “the only true and great hero” among government officials in the AIDS crisis.

 

Fauci married Christine Grady, a nurse and bioethicist with the NIH, in 1985, after they met while treating a patient. Grady is chief of the Department of Bioethics at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. The couple has three adult daughters: Jennifer, Megan, and Alison.[40] He is 5 feet 7 inches tall.

 

Fauci is a member of the National Academy of Sciences; the American Academy of Arts and Sciences; the National Academy of Medicine; the American Philosophical Society; and the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters; as well as other numerous professional societies including the American Society for Clinical Investigation; the Infectious Diseases Society of America,; and the American Association of Immunologists. He serves on the editorial boards of many scientific journals; as an editor of Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine; and as author, coauthor, or editor of more than 1,000 scientific publications, including several textbooks.[14]

 

Selected works and publications (usually partnered with a "team")

(Dates only for these team works)

March 1976; November 1, 1978; January 1983; January 1984;

February 5, 1988; February 4, 1993; December 1996;

July 8, 2004; April 2007; August 28, 2008; 2008; March 26, 2020

 

https://web.archive.org/web/20200209135255/https://history.nih.gov/NIHInOwnW

 

ords/assets/media/pdf/press/1984/PR_NIAID_1984_11_02.pdf

November 1984 news release:

HHS Secretary Margaret M. Heckler announces appointment of Dr. Fauci.

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 10:35 p.m. No.9821857   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1917 >>1935 >>2259 >>2355 >>2394 >>2436

>>9821793

 

Dr Fauci continued

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https://www.nytimes.com/2002/03/28/us/aids-researcher-fauci-wins-prize.html

https://archive.is/wip/UKZ2P

By Lawrence K. Altman

March 28, 2002

 

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the pioneering immunologist and longtime director of the infectious-disease center at the National Institutes of Health, was named yesterday as the winner of the nation's richest medical award, the $500,000 Albany Medical Center Prize in Medicine and Biomedical Research.

 

Although Dr. Fauci, 61, has been in the international spotlight for his AIDS research, the Albany center said he won the prize for a larger body of work.

 

It includes developing effective therapies for other diseases affecting the immune system and rheumatology, his overall contributions to the advancement of science and his distinguished public service.

 

All the research was carried out during Dr. Fauci's 33 years at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Md., where he has been director since 1984.

 

In the weeks after the anthrax attack last fall, Dr. Fauci often appeared with Tommy G. Thompson, the secretary of health and human services, as a government spokesman on the disease and bioterrorism.

 

Dr. Fauci (pronounced FOW-chee) was born in Brooklyn and trained in medicine at Cornell University-New York Hospital. He joined the allergy and infectious diseases institutes in 1968. In five years, he developed what are now standard therapies for then-fatal rheumatic diseases.

 

Dr. Fauci found that small doses of two drugs that had been used in larger amounts in cancer therapy cyclophosphamide (Cytoxan) and steroids (prednisone) could produce remissions of three noncancerous disorders: Wegener's granulomatosis, which can affect the sinuses, lungs, kidneys and other organs; polyarteritis nodosa, an autoimmune disorder of blood vessels; and lymphatoid granulomatosis, which destroys arteries and veins.

 

The Albany selection committee said his work in treating the three diseases was considered among the most important advances in rheumatology.

 

Dr. Fauci turned his attention to AIDS shortly after the disease was recognized in 1981. His research has focused on how H.I.V., the AIDS virus, impairs the immune system and on ways to develop more effective therapies and a vaccine.

 

In 1983 findings from Dr. Fauci's laboratory team began revealing a paradox:

although AIDS ultimately destroys the immune system, it actually increases immunological activity.

 

Ten years later, Dr. Fauci discovered that H.I.V. constantly replicates even very early in the infection and that it occurs in lymph nodes. His team's report on that seminal advance was the most-cited paper in AIDS research worldwide from 1993 to 1995.

 

Dr. Fauci was reported to be Mr. Thompson's choice for director of the National Institutes of Health, but this week the White House instead chose Dr. Elias A. Zerhouni of Johns Hopkins University. Administration officials said they did not want to grant Dr. Fauci's request to keep his current job while directing the institutes. Conservatives opposed him because of his remarks 14 years ago supporting fetal tissue research.

 

The Albany prize is the largest award in medicine in this country and the second in the world, behind the Nobel. It was established by a $50 million gift commitment from Morris Silverman, 89, a native of Troy, N.Y., who made his fortune in the leasing business in New York City. Dr. Fauci is the second recipient; the first was Dr. Arnold J. Levine, for his role in the discovery of the cancer gene p53.

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 10:41 p.m. No.9821917   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1922 >>1935 >>2259 >>2355 >>2394 >>2436

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https://heavy.com/news/2020/03/christine-grady-anthony-fauci-wife/

https://archive.is/XhNQQ

Christine Grady, Anthony Fauci’s Wife: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

By Erin Laviola

Updated Jun 23, 2020 at 9:08am

 

Fauci’s wife is also in the medical field, though she is not in the spotlight as much as her husband. Grady works as a nurse-bioethicist at the National Institutes of Health.

 

They have three daughters together.

 

  1. Christine Grady Worked With AIDS Patients Early On In Her Career

Grady’s knowledge about HIV and AIDS earned her the attention of the White House. In the late 1980s, she served on President Ronald Reagan’s “Commission on the HIV Epidemic.”

 

  1. Grady’s Thesis About the Search For an HIV Vaccine Was Published As a Book In 1995

Christine Grady’s Ph.D. thesis was about the ethical issues surrounding the development of a vaccine to prevent or treat HIV and AIDS. The report, titled “The Search for an AIDS Vaccine: Ethical Issues in the Development and Testing of a Preventive HIV Vaccine,” was published as a book in 1995.

 

In the book, Grady detailed the research that had been done up to that point and discussed the ethics of using human subjects to develop a potential vaccine.

 

Grady’s expertise and interest in the ethical issues involved with patient care influenced her career path. She has served as the Chief of the Department of Bioethics at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center since 2012, according to her LinkedIn profile.

Grady began serving as the acting chief in September 2011 and had been the deputy director of the department since 1996.

 

  1. Grady Says Her Parents Instilled In Her a Sense of Social Duty By Taking Her to Civil Rights Marches As a Child

But she was inspired to pursue nursing as a career by her parents, who instilled in her a sense of civic responsbility. Grady told the NIH in 1997, “When we were children, I can remember at young ages going on civil rights marches and things like that, because my parents took us there. We did not know what they were really about, because at the time, although I was older than some of my brothers and sisters, I was not that old. Some of those things did not register directly then, but I think they had an impact later on. So I have always been interested— again, there was my parents’ influence—in social issues.”

 

  1. Christine Grady Worked For Project Hope In Brazil For Two Years

Early on in her career, Christine Grady lived and worked in Brazil for two years.

 

She was involved with Project Hope, an international non-profit health care organization headquartered in Bethesa, Maryland.

Grady explained that her time in Brazil was eye-opening because she had to work with limited resources. For example, she told the NIH that syringes were washed and used multiple times because there were too few to go around. She said she often had to inject patients using syringes with blunt needles.

 

  1. Christine Grady & Anthony Fauci Met While Caring For a Patient

Christine Grady met her husband of more than thirty years while caring for a patient. Anthony Fauci explained in a 2015 interview that he and Grady “met over the bed of a patient.” Grady was called in to translate for a patient who spoke Portuguese.

 

Grady and Fauci got married in 1985. They have three adult daughters: Jennifer, Megan and Alison.

Fauci raved about his wife in that interview as a “triple threat. She went to school to get her PhD in philosophy, worked, and had three children.”

 

Their children are all grown and out of the house, but Grady and Fauci have maintained a large home for their daughters to visit. A search of online property records shows the couple bought their 4,000 square-foot, 4-bedroom Washington, D.C. home in 2014. The house was valued approximately $1.9 million in 2019.

 

==

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 10:49 p.m. No.9821965   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2009 >>2072 >>2089 >>2259 >>2355 >>2394 >>2436

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Dr Fauci continued

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article broken in two or three pieces

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https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB113383825463714813

https://archive.is/JHrKd#selection-2117.0-2127.48

https://archive.is/JHrKd

Agency Chief Spurs Bioterror Research – And Controversy As Dr. Fauci Pours NIH Funds Into Makers of Vaccines, Some Say He Oversteps

By Bernard Wysocki Jr.

Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Updated Dec. 6, 2005 12:01 am ET

 

BETHESDA, Md. – Anthony S. Fauci has hundreds of millions of dollars at his disposal to bet on drug companies, hoping they will come up with the next hit vaccine or medicine.

 

Dr. Fauci isn't a venture capitalist. An AIDS-research pioneer, he runs the infectious-diseases institute within the National Institutes of Health. Since the terror attacks of 2001, he has been playing an unusual role for an NIH official by supporting start-up companies with NIH grants and contracts. His belief: Market forces alone won't provide the medicines Americans need for protection against bioterrorism.

 

The 64-year-old Dr. Fauci is drawing his share of controversy. Some entrepreneurs who haven't been showered with money talk of a "Fauci Club" of favored companies.

 

Others say he is overstepping his bounds by funding rival entities and pitting them against each other for government contracts. In one case, the NIH gave materials from a supplier of one company to help jump-start research at a rival. One of his biggest bets on a next-generation anthrax vaccine has yet to pay off.

 

The most fundamental question is whether the government and Dr. Fauci should be trying to influence what drugs and vaccines the marketplace produces. "If you had to pick one person, he's a pretty good guy to pick," says J. Leighton Read, a partner at Alloy Ventures, a Palo Alto, Calif., venture-capital firm. "But I'm not sure Tony should be investing. His experience in products and manufacturing is very limited.

 

Maybe they ought to pay more attention to the invisible hand."

 

The workings of the invisible hand, though, have been all but invisible. Publicly traded drug companies have tended to stay away from vaccines, antibiotics and related drugs. These products have low profit margins and are especially prone to liability suits. The government is often the main customer for them.

 

Dr. Fauci acknowledges that bankrolling product development in the private sector "is not our spécialité de la maison." Still, he argues that some entity has to be the investor of last resort if the marketplace isn't producing crucial medicine. "The industry wasn't going to make the investment when they had a choice between developing a new Viagra, a new Lipitor, versus the very risky procedure of doing advanced development in a product where there wasn't going to be a guaranteed payback for them," Dr. Fauci says.

 

(article continued)

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 10:54 p.m. No.9822009   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2044 >>2072 >>2130 >>2259 >>2355 >>2394 >>2436

>>9821965

Dr Fauci article continued

part 2

 

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Dr. Fauci is pumping about $500 million to $600 million in taxpayer money a year, or about a third of his biodefense budget, into product development. Much of that goes to companies. By comparison, biotechnology venture investments in the U.S. totaled $4.06 billion in 2004, according to surveys by PricewaterhouseCoopers.

 

Dr. Fauci's goal is to get companies ready to bid on contracts under the BioShield program run by the NIH's parent, the Department of Health and Human Services.

 

The department was authorized by Congress last year to spend $5.6 billion over 10 years on biodefense drugs under BioShield.

 

A native of Brooklyn, N.Y., who joined the NIH in 1968 after graduating from Cornell University's medical school, Dr. Fauci already had achieved prominence as a scientist-bureaucrat before Sept. 11 set the stage for his new role. In the 1970s and 1980s, he did groundbreaking work on the immune system, and later gained recognition for helping decipher how the AIDS virus destroys the body's defenses. At a recent concert in Washington, D.C., the Irish rock star and activist Bono dedicated a song called "Miracle Drug," about his hopes for future disease treatments, to Dr. Fauci.

 

The scientist wows members of Congress with lucid briefings, all delivered in a rapid-fire New York accent. Discussing pandemic flu at a recent news conference, President Bush made a point of saying that he consults with Dr. Fauci.

 

After Sept. 11 and the anthrax attacks in the fall of 2001, Dr. Fauci and his agency, whose formal name is the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, divided pathogens into three categories. They gave highest priority to Category A pathogens such as anthrax, smallpox and plague. Dr. Fauci argued that his agency was well-suited to receive new funds for biodefense.

 

It was a persuasive argument. The agency's biodefense-related funding rose from $42 million a year in 2001 to nearly $1.2 billion in 2003 and nearly $1.7 billion this year. Spurred by colleagues, Dr. Fauci says he decided to fund companies on a large scale. That was a radical role for the NIH, which mostly has funded academic or basic research.

 

While an anthrax vaccine already existed, Dr. Fauci and other experts worried that it was hard to make and might cause side effects such as fever and headache. Dr. Fauci's institute solicited bids for a better one. Among the responders was a company in Brisbane, Calif., called VaxGen Inc.

 

Dr. Fauci knew VaxGen because the company had a promising AIDS vaccine that his agency had funded over several years. In 2003, however, the AIDS vaccine failed important clinical trials. In the meantime, VaxGen was busy reinventing itself as a biodefense company with a next-generation anthrax vaccine candidate.

 

Demanding Schedule

NIH spelled out a demanding schedule for the anthrax-vaccine bidders, such as delivering early trial results by the end of 2003. A predecessor company of drug giant Sanofi-Aventis SA declared the timetable impossible and was disqualified. Dr. Fauci's agency awarded $100 million in two funding rounds to VaxGen and about $80 million in two rounds to its main rival, Avecia Group PLC, a United Kingdom biotechnology company. The idea was to get them prepared to compete for a big federal contract to deliver a new anthrax vaccine to the national stockpile.

 

One of VaxGen's rivals, BioPort Corp., of Lansing, Mich., cried foul. The bidding specifically excluded any makers of the existing older-generation vaccine, of which there was just one, BioPort. The company swung into action, hiring publicists and lobbyists. Eventually, BioPort received a $122 million contract to supply the older vaccine, which is approved by the Food and Drug Administration, to the U.S. stockpile.

 

In late 2004, the department awarded the entire $877 million contract for a new anthrax vaccine to VaxGen under the BioShield program. Since then, though, VaxGen has stumbled and its vaccine is almost a year late. Its first deliveries now are slated for late 2006. The company won't get paid until it delivers. Meanwhile, Dr. Fauci finds himself on the spot.

 

At a House government reform committee hearing last month, Rep. Chris Cannon, a Utah Republican, grilled Dr. Fauci: "So now we've got a small company [VaxGen] failing to perform…We have an experimental technology to deal with a disease that we've already been attacked with…We don't have a stockpile, even though my understanding is, we have a company that has an FDA-approved vaccine for anthrax. Is that a fair statement of where we are?"

 

"Yes, it is a fair statement," Dr. Fauci replied. He added that the "experimental" technology has been used in other vaccines and an authoritative federal panel called for a transition to a new, safer vaccine.

 

continued--—-

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 11:03 p.m. No.9822072   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9821965

>>9822009

 

part 3, of 4 posts in thread

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In many ways, Dr. Fauci's description of his job makes him sound like a venture capitalist, although the NIH never takes ownership stakes in the companies it funds.

 

He seeks to place bets on multiple companies in the hopes of hitting the jackpot and to dole out the NIH's money in multiple rounds, using milestones to gauge progress.

"When you put your eggs in one basket, even a totally unavoidable scientific slip-up can leave you with no eggs in your basket. You have to hedge your bets," Dr. Fauci says.

 

Nonetheless, the Silicon Valley comparison makes him cringe, and he dislikes the term "venture capital" applied to his new role. "It makes our grantees very nervous," he says, referring to the traditional recipients of NIH money who worry about competing with companies for funds.

 

There is another big difference between Dr. Fauci and a venture capitalist. If a company that gets NIH funding becomes a stock-market darling, U.S. taxpayers don't enjoy any financial windfall, even though their money was put at risk.

 

Dr. Fauci says he draws on the vast scientific expertise within NIH to come up with products and companies worthy of funding. In May, he hired Michael Kurilla, an infectious-disease specialist who has worked at the drug company Wyeth, to work on biodefense projects.

 

The NIH's bet-hedging strategy has at times seemed prudent. It gave money to both Sanofi-Aventis and Chiron Corp. to develop an effective vaccine against H5N1 influenza, the bird flu that has raised alarms around the world about a possible pandemic. In August, Dr. Fauci announced that the first human trials of the Sanofi-Aventis vaccine were effective. The company now is trying to scale up production.

 

Funding Rivals

 

Dr. Fauci's tactic of funding rivals with directly competing products also can create controversy. In 2001, Bavarian Nordic A/S, a Danish biotechnology company, brought an idea for a smallpox vaccine to Dr. Fauci's institute. This got his attention, since the new vaccine could be used on patients with AIDS or other conditions that compromised their immune system. The existing vaccine is considered highly risky for such patients.

 

Dr. Fauci began funding Bavarian's research and development of a new smallpox vaccine. He also started funding a rival, Acambis PLC. NIH awarded more than $100 million to each company, with an eye toward making them competitors for a BioShield contract. That contract, for 20 million doses of the new smallpox vaccine, is expected to be awarded in 2006.

 

In a move that stunned Bavarian, the NIH gave Acambis samples of modified smallpox virus used by Bavarian. It had obtained the samples from Bavarian's own supplier, a professor in Germany.

 

Bavarian filed a civil lawsuit against Acambis in August at the U.S. District Court in Delaware. It filed a parallel complaint with the U.S. International Trade Commission in Washington, which has the power to bar imports of products that use stolen intellectual property. Bavarian said it has exclusive rights to the German professor's virus strains.

 

Bavarian didn't sue the NIH, though. It has been awarded $130 million in NIH contracts and already has received $45 million of that. "We do not believe it is good business practice to involve your customers in litigation," says Li Westerlund, director of intellectual-property rights at Bavarian.

 

The chief executive of Acambis, Gordon Cameron, says his company believes it received the virus strains without restrictions on their use. Dr. Fauci says he can't comment on the spat because it is in litigation.

 

When the government initially solicited bids for the smallpox-vaccine contract expected to be awarded next year, it required that all bidders have "unencumbered" intellectual property. After Acambis was sued, the government revised its bid solicitation to remove the word "unencumbered."

 

John Clerici, a partner at the law firm McKenna Long & Aldridge LLP in Washington who isn't involved in the Acambis case, says the revision shows how the government tends to deal with a few anointed companies. "I think this makes clear that NIH can and will do what it wants to ensure the game is being played by its rules, no matter what the rules have been in the past," says Mr. Clerici, who represents BioPort, the anthrax-vaccine maker. "This isn't exactly fair and open competition."

 

continued –

Anonymous ID: 3c22b7 July 1, 2020, 11:04 p.m. No.9822089   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2259 >>2355 >>2394 >>2436

>>9821965

 

part 4 of 4

end of Fauci thread

last post on Fauci

 

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Dr. Fauci, while declining to discuss specific cases, says competing for the parent agency's big BioShield contracts is all a matter of competence and meeting milestones. The issue for BioShield bidders, he says, is: "Do you meet the criteria?"

In reality, several companies have been funded by NIH only to find themselves on the losing end of big contracts.

 

Nonetheless, some companies worry that without NIH funding, they can't get on the inside track for BioShield. "If the NIH is giving grants, they become the gatekeeper. They define what gets developed, and exclude all these other innovative ideas," says Richard Hollis, chief executive of Hollis-Eden Pharmaceuticals Inc., a San Diego biotechnology concern developing a radiation-sickness antidote.

 

Hollis-Eden's experimental medicine addresses two medical problems stemming from radiation exposure. A rival product, Amgen Inc. 's Neupogen, addresses only one. Dr. Fauci's agency is funding studies of Neupogen for this use. When the Department of Health and Human Services recently put out draft bid requests and specified only one of the indications, it seemed to favor the Amgen product. Hollis-Eden's stock dropped 50% on the Nasdaq Stock Market over the next few days.

 

Hollis-Eden began urging members of Congress to complain to HHS Secretary Michael Leavitt. Rep. Tom Davis, Republican of Virginia, did so, writing that he is "very troubled" by the draft bid request. Stewart Simonson, an assistant HHS secretary, responded that the department was focusing on the most significant blood abnormality of radiation exposure. Dr. Fauci declined to comment on the Hollis-Eden protests.