"FDA is what I mean, in part, about failed regulation. We need them, but we need them to do their job, not kind of do their job. My best guess is the FDA needs to be thoroughly analyzed, then overhauled based on that analysis."
Agreed. The problem is how to do that with the inmates running the asylum! lol
Its a principle of good governance that there have to be effective checks and balances. What is happening is a failure of these checks and balances. From what I have seen the IOM and other agencies so far that I am aware of are not competent to overhaul the FDA. I really am not sure what is. That is perhaps the first thing that needs investigation.
There are increasing failures in checks and balances throughout government and associated institutions. This is coupled with a massive decline in effective investigative journalism. Newspapers are going under, and cutting budgets. So the fourth estate (media) are failing to act as balance to government and bureaucratic blunder. The fifth estate, internet, offers hope ... that would be people like us.
Government is increasingly driven by quick fixes and ideology. These have always been issues but I think they are worse now. This is independent of any party ... this is endemic to government, in every country I have looked at, which admittedly is not many. Pave over cracks and leave it to the next government, and hope you are not in power when the whole edifice crumbles!
There is currently no counter to the APA's DSM except the ICD. While the ICD is really just medical codes, I am not entirely sure of the full role of the DSM. I think it makes a claim to strong scientific authority, yet it fails to substantiate that at almost every point. Too much goes on behind closed doors, for example, and is not published and available for criticism.
The CDC and FDA both need to be refreshed ... a total overhaul including directives, regulations and governance. The IOM needs to get its act together. Somebody needs to take a good look at claimed evidence base medicine, and the bad claims need to be thrown out. The role of medical management and medical review need to be separated. There are conflicting goals here. EBMedicine needs to review papers for medical effectiveness based on science. EBManagement is about cost effectiveness, and public policy etc. They are not the same. Conflating managerial practice with scientific medicine is a road to spin, obfuscation, and bad medicine.
Public relations companies should not be allowed to masquerade as unbiased news sources. Churnalism needs to be revealed as shoddy reporting.
There are so many many problems, and they are growing.
Psychobabble has a foot in government, medicine, (arguably not) science, academia, economic interests (including the insurance industry and government), psychiatric associations, medical associations, law, pharma, public relations, and of course treating their patients. Yet they expound their position from a position of claimed authority. The big money earners in pharma are often psych based treatments, which are often not very effective at best, and are targeted at categories they find useful from the DSM. Yet if these categories are unsafe, ambiguous and hyped, who is there to put the checks and balances in place?
The entire medical profession also needs to lose its privileged legal status (which it has to various degrees in many countries) and to lose it right to largely unfettered self governance. Patient rights need to be enforced.
These all require a change in government direction. Governments are failing, investigative media are failing, and we (the public) are failing. I think it was Machiavelli who said "People get the government they deserve." I might be wrong, this is disputed. Milton Freedman, and others, have pointed out that liberty comes from eternal vigilance. So does good governance. Governance is not just about political parties, but the entire structure of government, and even large organizations.