Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Biden taps ex-FDA chief for vaccine push

- Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON – President-elect Joe Biden has picked a former Food and Drug commission­er to lead vaccine science in his drive to put 100 million shots into the arms of Americans in his administra­tion’s first 100 days and stem the COVID-19 pandemic.

Dr. David Kessler, who will have the title of chief science officer of COVID response, headed the Food and Drug Administra­tion in the 1990s under presidents of both political parties. He has been acting as a top pandemic adviser to Biden and his appointmen­t was announced Friday by the presidenti­al transition office.

Kessler will work out of the federal Department of Health and Human Services, assuming responsibi­lity for the scientific side of Operation Warp Speed, an effort launched under the Trump administra­tion to develop vaccines and treatments. The drive already has produced two highly effective vaccines, and more are on the way.

Nonetheles­s, the nation’s vaccinatio­n campaign has gotten off to a slow start, and most of the vaccine being delivered to states by the federal government is not being used right away.

A person advising the Biden transition team said Kessler will take on the role now being carried out by Dr. Moncef Slaoui, a prominent vaccine scientist and innovator who has been serving as chief advisor to Operation Warp Speed. Several vaccine candidates in the pipeline are in final clinical trials, and one company is expected to apply soon for FDA emergency approval for its formulatio­n. The person spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons.

Army Gen. Gustave Perna, who has been in charge of vaccine delivery under Operation Warp Speed, was expected to stay on.

Kessler, 69, will be able to start immediatel­y as his post does not require Senate approval.

Kessler will coordinate vaccine review and approval, as well as the logistics of manufactur­ing millions more doses. Experts say the U.S. will need to vaccinate upwards of 250 million people to approach the goal of “herd immunity,” where there is widespread resistance to virus allowing for a return to normal life. So far fewer than 12 million doses have been administer­ed.

Kessler has been involved in a wide range of issues through his career, from the battle against HIV/AIDS, to tobacco regulation and improving the nutritiona­l habits of Americans.

Appointed to head the FDA by President George H.W. Bush, he continued under President Bill Clinton.

Steering the agency from 1990 to 1997, Kessler earned nicknames like “Eliot Knessler” for his crusading efforts to enforce standards on everything from food labels to drug manufactur­ing.

His FDA legacy chiefly rests on a sweeping investigat­ion into tobacco industry practices, which led the agency to label nicotine an addictive drug companies purposely manipulate­d to hook smokers. Kessler drafted the U.S. government’s first-ever tobacco regulation­s, arguing cigarettes were nicotinede­livery devices that deserved scrutiny akin to drugs or medical devices.

When Congress finally gave the FDA authority over key parts of the tobacco industry in 2009, the law borrowed heavily from Kessler’s initial ideas.

After leaving government, he worked as the dean of medical schools at Yale University and the University of California, San Francisco. In November, Biden named him to co-chair a panel of advisers on the COVID-19 response effort.

 ?? DENIS PAQUIN/AP FILE ?? Former Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er David Kessler will direct vaccine science in the Biden administra­tion.
DENIS PAQUIN/AP FILE Former Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er David Kessler will direct vaccine science in the Biden administra­tion.

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