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- <text id=91TT0800>
- <title>
- Apr. 15, 1991: Physicians, Heal Thyselves!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Apr. 15, 1991 Saddam's Latest Victims
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HEALTH, Page 60
- Physicians, Heal Thyselves!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A new doctor arrives at the ailing National Institutes of Health
- to fight low morale, sagging wages and official interference
- </p>
- <p>By Dick Thompson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Inside the laboratories of the National Institutes of
- Health, 3,200 of America's best researchers are tackling medical
- mysteries that range from conception to aging. But one of the
- most perplexing problems confronting the NIH is its own health.
- Considered by many to be the world's most productive
- biomedical-research facility, the NIH is nonetheless suffering
- from a multitude of ailments. Noncompetitive salaries have made
- it difficult to retain top researchers or hire replacements.
- Political meddling has stopped some areas of investigation and
- assumed control of others. A recent monitoring of ethical
- infractions, concerns about allegations of fraud, and new
- conflict-of-interest regulations have combined to drag down
- morale. The Bush Administration let the situation worsen by
- leaving the NIH without a director for nearly two years. At
- least three men turned the job down, some protesting the
- Administration's abortion "litmus test."
- </p>
- <p> "Things are so bad, some have said, they couldn't even get
- a man to be NIH director," jokes Bernadine Healy, a
- cardiovascular researcher. This week Healy, 46, makes her debut
- before Congress as the new NIH director, the first woman to hold
- that job. To many it appears that George Bush may finally have
- summoned just the right doctor. In addition to work in medical
- and research areas, Healy has had a lengthy career in science
- policy. She has served on several federal science-advisory
- committees and, most recently, as chief of the Cleveland Clinic
- Foundation's Research Institute. Most important, she knows
- intimately the problems confronting the NIH. "This is not only
- a job worth doing but also one that can be done," she says.
- </p>
- <p> Healy is now entrusted with the world's most unusual
- biomedical-research center. No other institution houses as many
- biomedical researchers on a single campus. "It's the linchpin
- of biomedical research," says Yale medical school dean Leon
- Rosenberg. Last year alone, NIH scientists or their associates
- on university campuses began the first federally sanctioned gene
- therapy on a human, located the cystic fibrosis gene, developed
- a drug to reduce paralysis from spinal-cord injuries and
- demonstrated that the drug AZT prolongs life in AIDS patients.
- </p>
- <p> But the excitement of medical discoveries has masked the
- NIH's growing problems, especially funding. The 13 institutes
- that make up the NIH consume $8.3 billion in federal financing.
- While the NIH budget has grown steadily throughout the 1980s,
- politicians have earmarked larger portions for specific projects
- (such as AIDS research and the Human Genome Project) and left
- fewer dollars for fundamentals. Moreover, the wages paid federal
- scientists, which have never been comparable to those paid their
- counterparts outside government, have fallen dramatically behind--and the lure of fatter paychecks is becoming almost
- irresistible. The average salary for scientists with 10 years'
- experience is about $60,000. Researchers with that experience
- can double their paychecks at most universities, and in industry
- their wages can triple. The salary discrepancy has made it
- difficult to find replacements, particularly since today's
- medical-school graduates are burdened by enormous loans. Says
- J. Edward Rall, director of the NIH's Office of Intramural
- Research: "If somebody owes $80,000, it is difficult to
- contemplate a research career with the government. You just
- can't afford it." A proposed job category that would allow 200
- top scientists to be paid as much as $138,900 is being
- re-evaluated by the White House.
- </p>
- <p> Poor pay has long been an accepted fact of life for
- government scientists. But the rise of political meddling has
- so soured the atmosphere around the campus that the salary
- differential has become more important. The most obvious
- limitations on scientific inquiry have come from conservatives,
- who have won official or de facto bans in such
- abortion-sensitive areas as contraceptive research and the use
- of fetal tissue as a treatment in Parkinson's and Alzheimer's
- diseases. When 20-year NIH veteran Lynn Loriaux was prevented
- from studying the French abortifacient RU-486, he left last
- August and became director of endocrinology at Oregon Health
- Sciences University. "It was just too hard to find the freedom
- to work in this area," he says. Since the ban on speaking fees
- for federal employees went into effect last year, NIH
- researchers have been prohibited from accepting lecture fees and
- other traditional forms of supplemental income offered to their
- academic brethren. And the institutes' new science police,
- prowling for the scent of fraud, visibly signal a more stringent
- environment on the campus. "All these things take their toll,"
- says immunologist Joseph Bolen, a 10-year NIH veteran who has
- just resigned to take a position with a pharmaceutical firm.
- </p>
- <p> In tackling these problems, Healy is aware she will need
- to build a strong consensus for action. "No one woman, or man,
- will be able to do it right without a lot of support," she
- says. During the past two years, the individual institute
- directors have moved into the power vacuum at the top, and it
- will be difficult for her to wrest back authority. The NIH is
- a national treasure. Healy's difficult task is to make sure this
- treasure is not squandered, even if it means using every remedy
- in her black bag.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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