[Senate Hearing 119-28]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]


                                                      S. Hrg. 119-28

                      NOMINATION OF MARTIN MAKARY
                      TO SERVE AS COMMISSIONER OF
                             FOOD AND DRUGS
=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                                 OF THE

                    COMMITTEE ON HEALTH, EDUCATION,
                          LABOR, AND PENSIONS

                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED NINETEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                                   ON

           EXAMINING THE NOMINATION OF MARTIN MAKARY, OF VIRGINIA, TO 
            BE COMMISSIONER OF FOOD AND DRUGS, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
            AND HUMAN SERVICES

                               __________

                             MARCH 6, 2025

                               __________

 Printed for the use of the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and 
                                Pensions
                                
[GRAPHIC NOT AVAILABLEIN TIFF FORMAT]                                

        Available via the World Wide Web: http://www.govinfo.gov
        
�                               __________

�                  U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE
59-570 PDF                  WASHINGTON : 2026
=====================================================================

          COMMITTEE ON HEALTH, EDUCATION, LABOR, AND PENSIONS

                BILL CASSIDY, M.D., Louisiana, Chairman
RAND PAUL, M.D., Kentucky            BERNIE SANDERS (I), Vermont, 
SUSAN M. COLLINS, Maine                  Ranking Member
LISA MURKOWSKI, Alaska               PATTY MURRAY, Washington
MARKWAYNE MULLIN, Oklahoma           TAMMY BALDWIN, Wisconsin
ROGER MARSHALL, M.D., Kansas         CHRISTOPHER MURPHY, Connecticut
TIM SCOTT, South Carolina            TIM KAINE, Virginia
JOSH HAWLEY, Missouri                MAGGIE HASSAN, New Hampshire
TOMMY TUBERVILLE, Alabama            JOHN HICKENLOOPER, Colorado
JIM BANKS, Indiana                   ED MARKEY, Massachusetts
JON HUSTED, Ohio                     ANDY KIM, New Jersey
ASHLEY MOODY, Florida                LISA BLUNT ROCHESTER, Delaware
                                     ANGELA ALSOBROOKS, Maryland

                Amanda Lincoln, Majority Staff Director
           Danielle Janowski, Majority Deputy Staff Director
                Warren Gunnels, Minority Staff Director
              Bill Dauster, Minority Deputy Staff Director
                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                               STATEMENTS

                        THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 2025

                                                                   Page

                           Committee Members

Cassidy, Hon. Bill, Chairman, Committee on Health, Education, 
  Labor, and Pensions, Opening statement.........................     1

                               Witnesses

Makary, Dr., Martin, Arlington, VA...............................     2
    Prepared statement...........................................     3

                          ADDITIONAL MATERIAL

Statements, articles, publications, letters, etc.
Cassidy, Hon. Bill
    Washington Post Article......................................    38

 
                      NOMINATION OF MARTIN MAKARY
                      TO SERVE AS COMMISSIONER OF
                             FOOD AND DRUGS

                              ----------                              


                        Thursday, March 6, 2025

                                       U.S. Senate,
       Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10 a.m., in room 
SD-562, Dirksen Senate Office Building, Hon. Bill Cassidy, 
presiding.

    Present: Senators Cassidy [presiding], Paul, Collins, 
Murkowski, Hawley, Tuberville, Banks, Husted, Moody, Murray, 
Baldwin, Kaine, Hassan, Hickenlooper, Markey, Kim, Blunt 
Rochester, and Alsobrooks.

                  OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR CASSIDY

    The Chairman. The Senate Committee on Health Education, 
Labor, and Pensions will please come to order. Thank you, Dr. 
Makary for appearing before the Committee.

    The Food and Drug Administration is tasked with overseeing 
everything from drugs that treat debilitating diseases to 
safeguards in the U.S. food supply. Well, FDA has become a gold 
standard around the world in safeguarding public health, the 
agency faces significant challenges. The bureaucracy has led to 
delays in approving new medicines and devices, restricting 
patients' access to innovative treatments that can be 
lifesaving.

    As the Trump administration looks to cut red tape across 
the Federal Government, the agency should look at innovative 
ways to address bottlenecks in the review process. This could 
include using artificial intelligence and other technologies to 
improve efficiency and accelerate drug discovery while ensuring 
these products are safe for Americans.

    Another topic of interest is food safety. Americans deserve 
to know that the food they buy for their families is safe to 
eat. One place to start should be examining FDA's review 
process to ensure the safety of ingredients that go into foods. 
I know Dr. Makary is passionate about this issue. I look 
forward to working with him if he is confirmed.

    The American people's trust in our public health and 
science agencies and the products they regulate must be 
restored. Rebuilding public confidence in medical products like 
vaccines is especially important as we respond to measles 
outbreaks and as FDA considers recommendations for vaccines for 
flu strains ahead of the upcoming flu season. Dr. Makary with 
his experience as a surgeon and an effective health policy 
communicator, can help our public health agencies rebuild trust 
with the American people.

    Thank you for appearing before the Committee and discussing 
your vision on how to make America healthy again. Senator 
Sanders is not here, so Dr. Makary, we will go to you for your 
opening statement.

         STATEMENT OF DR. MARTIN MAKARY, ARLINGTON, VA

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator Dr. Cassidy, and Ranking 
Member Sanders and Members of the Committee. I'm humbled to be 
before you here.

    I'd like to thank President Trump for his confidence in 
nominating me to lead the Food and Drug Administration. I'm 
joined today by my wife Jessica, my sister Maria, my brother 
Mark, Nora, Alexander Jacoby, and my very sacrificial mother 
and my career role model, my father. My father dedicated his 
life to the care of children with leukemia, lymphoma, 
hemophilia, sickle cell disease, and then turned his attention 
to adult hematology.

    His father, my grandfather, was a pharmacist in a poor 
Egyptian community and believed in treating everybody equally, 
especially the most vulnerable among them--a philosophy I've 
tried to emulate in my career and research. Even from the 
African continent, my grandfather looked to the U.S. FDA for 
trusted guidance. That's because the FDA has a long history of 
using gold standard science to uphold public safety, and help 
us as clinicians take care of patients when they come to us for 
help.

    As a kid, I vividly remember being in the grocery store in 
our small town with my dad, when somebody would stop him, break 
out in tears, and give him a long hug after what I would learn 
to be a decades long battle with lymphoma. It happened a few 
times, and each time it inspired me even more.

    For 22 years now, I've had the privilege to walk into the 
Johns Hopkins Hospital to live out that mission. And each 
morning as I enter the front door, I pause and look at the 
nine-foot statue of Jesus that stands in the center of the 
hospital lobby. And I read the sacred text engraved at the 
base, ``Come to me all ye who are heavy laden and I will give 
you rest.''

    I'm grateful to Johns Hopkins for allowing me to have a 
creative career, a dual career, as both a surgical oncologist 
and a healthcare public policy researcher. In addition to using 
FDA approved devices and medications, my research which has now 
spanned over 300 scientific peer reviewed articles in the 
medical literature, has focused on what's actually making a 
difference in helping people, and how healthcare has become too 
fragmented, too cold, and too corporate.

    My research and subsequent book on price gouging and 
predatory billing in healthcare, turned into advocacy to demand 
more transparency in healthcare. President Trump heard the plea 
and invited me to the White House in his first Administration 
to enact the Nation's first executive order to bring down 
hospital and drug prices through greater transparency.

    The reform was entirely bipartisan-just as President Trump 
and Secretary Kennedy's call to make America Healthy Again by 
finally addressing the root causes of our child chronic disease 
epidemic, a message that's resonated with moms across the 
country, regardless of their politics. A smarter FDA that works 
for all Americans should be a goal we can all agree on.

    As a scientist who has spent a career evaluating medical 
interventions, I believe in the scientific process. In 
addition, I also believe, that we can use common sense, Dr. 
Cassidy, as I have been in the operating room, as you would 
relate, as a respected hematologist, it's hard to perform a 
long-sophisticated operation for liver cancer and not ask why 
are rates of liver cancer tripled in the United States. We now 
have a generational opportunity in American healthcare.

    President Trump and Secretary Kennedy's focus on healthy 
foods has galvanized a grassroots movement in America. 
Childhood obesity is not a willpower problem, and the rise of 
early onset Alzheimer's is not a genetic cause. We should be 
and we will be addressing food, as it impacts our health.

    Thanks to the courage of President Trump and Secretary 
Kennedy, we now have a generational opportunity to usher in 
radical transparency, to facilitate more cures, meaningful 
treatments, and diagnostics at the FDA to help people take care 
of their own health. My father told me to write down my 
observations and my experiences in healthcare and the research 
I delved into. Much of the research I did, focused on the 
fundamental question: is what we are doing working?

    I wrote books to educate the public on medical science, and 
to empower them to live healthier lives. If confirmed, I hope 
to ensure the FDA holds to the gold standard of trusted 
science, transparency, and common sense to rebuild public trust 
and make America healthy again. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    [The prepared statement Dr. Makary follows.]
       prepared statement of martin makary
                  
    Thank you and good morning, Chairman [Dr.] Cassidy, Ranking Member 
Sanders, and Members of the Committee.

    I'm humbled to be here before you. I'd like to thank President 
Trump for his confidence in nominating me to lead the Food and Drug 
Administration. I am joined today by my wife, brother, and sister as 
well as my sacrificial mother and my career role model, my father. He 
dedicated his life to the care of children with leukemia, lymphoma, 
hemophilia, sickle cell disease, then turned his focus to adult 
hematology.

    His father was a pharmacist in a poor Egyptian community, and 
believed in treating everyone in the community equally, especially the 
most vulnerable among them--a motto I've tried to live by in my career.

    Even from the African continent, my grandfather looked to the FDA 
for trusted guidance. That's because the FDA has a long history using 
gold standard science to uphold public safety and help us take care of 
people when they come to us for help.

    As a kid, I vividly remember being in a grocery store with my dad, 
when someone stopped to give him a hug after a long battle with 
lymphoma. It happened a few times, and each time it inspired me even 
more.

    For 22 years now I've been privileged to walk into the Johns 
Hopkins Hospital to live out that mission, and each morning as I enter 
the front door, I pause to look at the 9-foot statue of Jesus that 
stands in the hospital lobby and read the sacred text engraved at the 
base, ``Come to me all who are heavily laden, and I will give you 
rest.''

    I'm grateful to Johns Hopkins for allowing me to have a dual career 
as both a surgical oncologist, and a health care researcher.

    In addition to using FDA approved devices and medications, my 
research has focused on patient safety, the Orphan Drug Act, how the 
FDA evaluates devices, opioids, and how health care has become too 
fragmented, too cold, and too corporate. My research on price gouging 
and predatory billing turned into advocacy to call for price 
transparency in health care.

    President Trump heard the plea and invited me to the White House to 
enact the Nation's first executive order to bring down hospital and 
drug prices through greater transparency.

    The reform was entirely bipartisan--just as President Trump and 
Secretary Kennedy's call to Make America Health Again by finally 
addressing the root causes of our childhood chronic disease epidemic 
resonated with Republican, Democrat, and Independent moms across this 
country.

    A smarter FDA that works for all Americans should be a goal we can 
all agree on. As a scientist who has spent a career evaluating medical 
interventions, I believe in the scientific process, but in addition to 
using trusted science, we can also use common sense. Dr. Cassidy is a 
highly respected hepatologist and can tell you: It's hard to perform a 
sophisticated long operation for liver cancer and not ask, ``why have 
rates of liver cancer tripled in the U.S.''?

    We now have a generational opportunity in American health care. 
President Trump and Secretary Kennedy's focus on healthy foods has 
galvanized a grassroots movement in America. Childhood obesity is not a 
willpower problem, and the rise of early onset Alzheimer's is not 
genetic--we should be, and we will be, assessing the foods impacting 
our health.

    Thanks to the courage of President Trump and Secretary Kennedy, we 
now have a generational opportunity to usher in radical transparency 
and to facilitate more cures, meaningful treatments, and diagnostics to 
empower people to take care of their health.

    My father told me to write down my observations about my 
experiences in health care and the research I delved into. Much of the 
research I did research focused on the fundamental question: Is what we 
are doing working? I wrote books to educate people on medical science 
to empower them to live a healthy life. If confirmed, I hope to ensure 
the FDA holds to the gold standard of trusted science, transparency, 
and common sense to rebuild public trust and Make America Healthy 
Again.
                                 ______
                                 
    The Chairman. Thank you, Dr. Makary. I'll start with 
questions. In 2021, a few months after President Biden took 
office, FDA announced it would no longer enforce the in-person 
dispensing requirement for Mifepristone, the drug, which 
obviously is an abortion.

    Now, this is concerning to me. There is a case out of 
Louisiana, which is incredibly egregious, in which there was no 
recognition that the person requesting the drug was not the 
patient, but rather someone who was going to allegedly coerce 
the person into taking the medication, which would've been 
evident to a physician should she or he have seen the patient.

    If confirmed, would you reinstate the in-person dispensing 
requirement as well as reporting requirements for adverse 
events and other complications associated with the drug?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator. And to hear of someone 
being coerced to take Mifepristone is deeply disturbing and I 
might even suggest criminal. I have no preconceived plans on 
Mifepristone policy except to take a solid hard look at the 
data and to meet with the professional career scientists who 
have reviewed the data at the FDA, and to build an expert 
coalition to review the ongoing data, which is required to be 
collected as a part of the REMS program, The Risk Evaluation 
and Mitigation Strategy. It is pursuant to the REMS. And so, if 
we're going to collect data, I believe we should look at it.

    The Chairman. Last week the FDA announced it would cancel 
its annual Vaccines and Related Biologic Products Advisory 
Committee, which meets to select anticipated virus strains for 
next year's flu vaccines.

    Now, I'm told by people who are familiar, that the FDA will 
make the recommendation and that they will come up with the 
right decision. But they also say what is lost is the 
transparency, because the open meeting allows a postmortem, if 
you will, as we say in medicine, a review of last year of what 
went right, what went wrong, and how to make it better.

    I think one of the laudable things about Secretary 
Kennedy's positions is he wants more transparency in terms of 
how the Federal Government makes medical decisions as part of 
restoring that faith and so, frankly, this seems to kind of go 
backward on that. So how will you ensure that advisory 
committees remain objective, transparent, and still benefiting 
from the necessary expertise of external experts?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, thank you for the question, and I was 
not involved in that decision. Certainly, we've confirmed once 
in office, you have my commitment to take a look at it. As you 
know, that VRBPAC committee takes a look at guidance and 
recommendations from international groups such as the GIP 
International Consortium. My understanding is, at least for the 
last seven or 8 years that I've been following that group, we 
have simply rubber stamped whatever the international GIP----

    The Chairman. Can I stop you for a second? My understanding 
though, since these strains typically begin, like in Australia 
or China, it isn't so much as a rubber stamp, but as much as 
recognizing what are you seeing, because that's what's coming 
to us. So, I think it's more than quibbling to say that you're 
learning from them. Your thoughts?

    Dr. Makary. Yes. So, the American public deserves 
confidence that scientists are looking at that data from the 
southern hemisphere. It's all reported into a registry, all the 
dominant strains, and then picking the most dominant strains 
that are lighting up in that registry is that process of really 
trying to estimate which strains are going to be dominant in 
the United States. It's not very precise, some years we don't 
get it very well, but it's the best we can do with the data we 
have available at the time.

    For example, the International GIP group chose to no longer 
include the influenza B strains a couple years ago, sounded 
like a very reasonable decision, and VRBPAC also went along 
with that recommendation. But I think we're aligned in that the 
American public want to have some confidence that independent 
scientists are looking at these data.

    The Chairman. Going back to the transparency again, it 
seems what's lost with the open meeting is the transparency. So 
how can you as FDA commissioner advocate for that transparency? 
Because we want the American people to know, and obviously 
canceling the meeting will kind of shut that door a little bit.

    Dr. Makary. Yes. So, Senator, I was not involved in that 
decision----

    The Chairman. I accept that but we're voting for you. So 
how are you going to make it happen? I guess that's my 
question.

    Dr. Makary. You have my commitment to review what the 
committees are doing, how they're being used--as you know, I 
was critical when that committee was not convened at all during 
one of the Covid booster guidance decisions by the FDA and 
leadership at the time argued that they are advisory, and we 
don't have to convene them, that was repeatedly throughout the 
Biden administration.

    There may be some value if there's a step where the 
efficiencies can be made but I think with something that's 
important, something that's critical, something where we want 
expert opinion, it not only provides some of that wisdom, but 
it also increases the perception of confidence from the general 
public.

    The Chairman. Thank you.

    Senator Murray.

    Senator Murray. Thank you very much. Thank you for, for 
being here today. Let me follow-up on that because last week I 
sent you a letter along with some of my colleagues asking you 
about the FDA's cancellation of that Vaccine Advisory Committee 
meeting.

    For everybody's information, this is a meeting that takes 
place annually, for at least 30 years to make recommendations 
on which influenza strains should be included in the flu 
vaccines for the upcoming flu season. And for the first time in 
decades, FDA canceled that meeting with no explanation given, 
no new date chosen. That is, I believe, unprecedented and 
dangerous and you just referred to it, Dr. Makary.

    In 2022, you raised concerns when the FDA was considering 
not holding a vaccine committee meeting to authorize Covid-19 
boosters for kids 12 to 15, and at the time you said, ``It was 
unconscionable and undermined the integrity of the FDA's 
standard process to not hold that committee meeting.'' So, if 
you are confirmed, will you commit to immediately reschedule 
that FDA Vaccine Advisory Committee meeting to get the expert 
views. We need to know those so we can have the correct vaccine 
for the upcoming flu season.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator, for the question, and I 
appreciated our time together in meeting ahead of this hearing. 
I was not involved in that decision and what I would say is----

    Senator Murray. I'm just asking you if you'll immediately 
reconvene it.

    Dr. Makary. I will immediately reevaluate which sessions, 
the leadership of that center, which decisions, which topics, 
could benefit from----

    Senator Murray. What goes into a reevaluation? This is done 
every year so we know what flu vaccine to have. What are you 
reevaluating?

    Dr. Makary. First of all, for the last seven or 8 years 
that I've been following it, they simply adopt verbatim the 
recommendation of the international GIP group. But I was not 
involved in that decision. I will say that in my opinion, there 
was a huge difference between requiring every 12-year-old girl 
in America to take an eighth Covid booster shot versus rubber 
stamping a recommendation from the international GIP group, 
which has done seven out of the last 7 years.

    I'm not saying that the decision is something I was aware 
of or involved in, but it's certainly something I will look at, 
if confirmed.

    Senator Murray. Okay. I'm very unclear because the FDA is 
the gold standard for all of us. And this committee hearing is 
what has always been what we look to, the FDA look to, the 
American people look to, to determine what the flu vaccine is. 
What are you going to look at to make a determination and 
figure something else out now decades into this, what are you 
re-looking at?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I was not involved in that decision, 
but the committee looks at----

    Senator Murray. I understand that. I assumed you would say 
yes, I will reconfirm it immediately so we can let our public 
health experts and doctors know what flu to have next fall.

    Dr. Makary. As I understand it, the committee members and 
the scientists at the FDA, the career professional scientists 
at the FDA, look at the recommendation of the international GIP 
group.

    Senator Murray. I am just asking--you just told me that you 
were going to reevaluate it, and I want to know what you are 
reevaluating it on. What are you looking at to make a decision 
whether to reconvene it?

    Dr. Makary. In conjunction with the Center Director of the 
Biologic Center, I would reevaluate which topics deserve a 
convening of the Advisory Committee members on VRBPAC and which 
may not require a convening, obviously during----

    Senator Murray. What would we base our decision on?

    Dr. Makary. Well, you can ask the Biden administration that 
chose not to convene the committee meeting for the Covid 
vaccine booster.

    Senator Murray. I get that. I understand, but I'm asking 
you, how will we know what flu vaccine to take next year, if 
this committee doesn't reconvene and make their recommendation?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I was not involved in that decision 
not to convene that group.

    Senator Murray. I just thought you would say yes, we're 
going to reconvene, who knows what's coming. Let me just ask 
you really quick, I am also following-up on a question and on 
mifepristone because FDA does play a really critical role in 
making sure we have safe and effective medications.

    Contraception and medication abortion have been approved by 
the FDA for many, many decades based on mountains of high-
quality evidence and expert scientific judgments. So, if you 
are confirmed, will you commit to upholding the science and 
evidence-based drug approvals for all FDA approved products, 
including contraception and medication abortion?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you for the question, Senator Murray, you 
have my commitment to follow the independent scientific review 
process at the FDA, which is a tried-and-true process, and that 
has been around. And so that is my commitment to you, Senator.

    Senator Murray. Okay, well, I want to be clear, there have 
been over a hundred high quality studies over more than two 
decades backing up the science and safety of mifepristone. 
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    The Chairman. Senator Paul.

    Senator Paul. Congratulations Dr. Makary, on your 
nomination.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you.

    Senator Paul. I think one of the most important things we 
need in government are people who are open-minded. I think 
closed-mindedness, the idea that this is settled and no one 
will ever--If you see data as the FDA and you have to make a 
decision, are you willing to lead where the data and the facts 
take you as opposed to your preconceptions?

    Dr. Makary. Absolutely, Senator Paul. I think it is part of 
being a scientist, we need more humility in the medical 
establishment. You have to be willing to evolve your position 
as new data comes in.

    Senator Paul. The people who aren't involved in science 
think that there's settled science, and this is, it's just all 
settled and we will all be quiet and submit to whatever settled 
science is. But you mentioned to me on the way in that 
yesterday you removed a gallbladder through the laparoscope.

    I was in medical school and surgical training about the 
time where everybody made a four-or five-inch V incision to 
take the gallbladder out. And the older surgeons, the 
consensus, they ran the surgery departments, they were like, 
it's malpractice to use these tiny incisions and blow the air 
into the abdomen and do all this. But it took an overcoming of 
the consensus. Do you remember some of that, it might've been a 
little after your time, but you remember some of the trends 
from the larger incision, the small incision, and the 
resistance of the consensus?

    [Laughter.]

    Dr. Makary. Oh, yes. Senator, I can tell you some of the 
surgeons who trained me said things like, big surgeons used big 
incisions, and the bigger the incision the better. And without 
having a big open incision, you can't really see what you're 
doing. And I would point out that a laparoscope gives you 10 
times the magnification, but there's a lot of medical dogma 
that has contaminated our field, and I think it's tied to a 
lack of humility.

    Ultimately, what makes a great doctor, in my opinion, as I 
teach my residents, is not how much you know, it's your 
humility and your willingness to learn as you go from patients.

    Senator Paul. I think some people here also are not duly 
impressed enough by what it takes to do the kind of surgery 
that you do. Now, I'm an ophthalmologist and I do eye surgery, 
and we do really tiny incisions, but our surgery lasts between 
five and 20 minutes a lot of times to take the cataract. How 
long does it take to do a--you've done Whipples, I imagine, 
which is a surgery on the liver. How long does a Whipple 
surgery take?

    Dr. Makary. Yes, I've done a lot of Whipple operations and 
eyelet transplant procedures, and then pioneered a new type of 
procedure, which is a laparoscopic pancreas eyelet 
transplantation, with hopes that it can someday be used to cure 
diabetes. It was about 8 hours for that operation when we 
started. We've gotten it down to about four or 5 hours, and 
we've done some laparoscopic Whipples in 3 hours.

    Senator Paul. With regard to the vaccine committees, and 
they talk about whether they meet or they don't meet and 
things, there have been some questions, and one of the 
questions that I've been bringing forward is whether or not 
there could be a conflict of interest. And one of the things 
I've asked, and you would think it would be universally 
accepted by everyone without question, is you should have to 
reveal if you get royalties from drug companies.

    If you're making a decision on a Pfizer vaccine or a 
Moderna vaccine, I would think the least of transparency should 
be that you reveal if you get royalties from those companies. 
Do you think we need to evaluate the people on the committees 
or see whether they get royalties or see whether or not there 
are conflict of interest for the people making these decisions?

    Dr. Makary. Yes, I do, Senator. We need to review the 
ethics policy because people see things that appear to be a 
cozy relationship between industry and the regulators that are 
supposed to be regulating the products. Now, I want American 
companies to thrive. I want life sciences companies to thrive, 
but we need to call balls and strikes and to keep that 
independent scientific review process free of any conflicts. 
So, I do think it deserves a look.

    Senator Paul. Really, I think it would be an area that a 
lot of people, once again, think there's a consensus. Either 
take all the Covid vaccines or not. Most of Europe doesn't 
recommend a Covid vaccine for under age 12. Almost all the 
countries don't recommend it for under 12, some under 18. And 
it's because they've looked at the risk benefit for children of 
the vaccine and some of the possible complications of it. And 
it's different, frankly, for older people.

    It's like, these are things that we should at least discuss 
and evaluate. Some of the most pro-vaccine people, when the 
policy came out to give boosters to your 6-month-old said they 
wouldn't even give it to their 24-year-old, a booster.

    You remember one of the famous committee members, two 
committee members left the vaccine committee because the CDC 
under Biden politicized the process and overrode the vaccine 
committee. So, to insinuate that somehow there's some brand-new 
thing going on, these are longstanding controversies. And I 
think that the main thing, I'll go back to, is in the 
beginning, we need open-mindedness. And I appreciate your 
willingness to look at the facts, the data, and not be 
overwhelmed by preconceptions.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    The Chairman. Senator Baldwin.

    Senator Baldwin. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Welcome Dr. 
Makary. I want to go over a couple of topics that have already 
been raised, and if we have time explore one that has not yet. 
But I want to understand your position on mifepristone. Because 
we had an opportunity to speak in my office and I thought that 
you were pretty clear with me during that meeting that you were 
aware of the overwhelming scientific conclusion about the 
safety of this medication and that you did not think politics 
should be involved in decisions moving forward. And I 
understood from our conversation that you intended to stand 
behind the FDA's longstanding determination.

    But after our meeting I don't know if it was you or your 
minders, but they followed up with my staff and said they felt 
that you misunderstood my question and wanted to clarify your 
answer. Which by my read, implied that you are open to totally 
reexamining the scientific determination even with decades of 
evidence. So, I want to clearly understand your position as FDA 
commissioner. Will you maintain current access to mifepristone, 
yes, or no?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I'll be very clear about my position. 
My position is that of a scientist. As you know, part of the 
REMS, the Risk Evaluation Mitigation Strategy, that was put in 
initially by President Clinton in that Administration, and then 
modified under Obama, and then again under President Biden, 
requires ongoing data collection. So, I can't prejudge that 
data without looking at it.

    Senator Baldwin. You're going to--you said something about 
convening an ongoing panel.

    Dr. Makary. I did not mention to----

    Senator Baldwin. A previous question just asked.

    Dr. Makary. I did not mention a panel. I said I would 
convene the scientists, the professional career scientists at 
the FDA, who have reviewed the totality of data on this, and 
are also looking at ongoing data that is being collected. There 
could be, for example Senator, a drug-drug interaction that may 
show up on the ongoing data.

    Senator Baldwin. Okay. So, I want to ask if that's your 
approach to something that has been approved for now decades, 
are you going to do the same with Tylenol?

    There are a lot of side effects for daily use, including 
liver damage. Will you be doing that for Tylenol?

    Dr. Makary. As you may know Senator, Tylenol does not have 
a regulation requiring a REMS, a Risk Evaluation Mitigation 
Strategy.

    Senator Baldwin. I'm not asking whether it does or not. I'm 
asking, are you going to do ongoing surveillance of the 
possible side effects for that drug that was approved many 
years ago? How about asthma inhalers that have been associated 
with osteoporosis, opportunistic lung infections? Are you going 
to be doing that for those medications?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I will be following the law and the 
regulation requires an ongoing review.

    Senator Baldwin. You have a totally different approach to 
this. I want to get to that again, a little bit more about what 
we're talking about with the influenza vaccine and vaccines in 
general. As has been said in this hearing, the advisory 
committee annual meeting was canceled for selection of what 
strain of influenza our vaccines for this next season would 
confront.

    There have been additional reports that Secretary Kennedy 
wants to make significant changes to another Advisory Committee 
that makes recommendation and provides advice for vaccines. And 
I worry that this is merely a ploy to install vaccine skeptics 
on these critical panels. Our Advisory Committees must maintain 
scientific integrity and should not be changed for political 
purposes or to further an agenda.

    Dr. Makary, do you intend to remove experts from the 
vaccine and related Biological Products Advisory Committee?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, first of all, I'm not familiar with 
what you're referring to regarding Secretary Kennedy. Secretary 
Kennedy wants to make America healthy again. With regard to the 
Vaccine VRBPAC Committee, deciding on which flu strain to 
identify-I was not involved in that decision, but again, just 
as a reminder----

    Senator Baldwin. Are you planning if confirmed to remove 
any experts from the vaccine and related Biological Products 
Advisory Committee?

    Dr. Makary. I have no preconceived plans to rearrange that 
committee or any committee, I will say on influenza that----

    Senator Baldwin. Do you commit to maintaining scientific 
integrity on advisory committees and receiving regular outside 
expertise if confirmed?

    Dr. Makary. Of course.

    Senator Baldwin. Okay.

    The Chairman. Senator Collins.

    Senator Collins. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. First of all, 
Doctor, I appreciate your willingness to serve and was 
impressed as a result of our conversation in my office. Let me 
ask you, you've had a lot of questions about the Vaccine 
Advisory Committee. Let me just ask you a simple, 
straightforward question, and that is, if you are confirmed, 
will you reinstate meetings of the committee?

    Dr. Makary. The VRBPAC Committee will be meeting if 
confirmed and I'm commissioner. Yes.

    Senator Collins. Thank you. In February, we learned that 
hundreds of probationary employees at FDA were dismissed. And 
this really concerns me because we need a flow of young new 
scientists and researchers, especially since we're seeing 
retirements and resignations. And ironically, more than half of 
the FDA employees are funded under various industry user fee 
agreements. So, there is revenue coming into the FDA to pay for 
these employees. If confirmed, will you, not an outside force, 
but you, have full authority over FDA staffing decisions?

    Dr. Makary. Senator if confirmed as commissioner, you have 
my commitment that I will do an assessment of the staffing and 
personnel at the agency. I have not been involved in any of the 
decisions regarding any of the personnel changes recently, but 
if confirmed, you have my commitment that I will do an 
assessment.

    Senator Collins. I just want to make sure that you are the 
one doing that assessment. I'm not saying that the staffing 
level is perfect, and I think it's helpful for a new 
commissioner to do an assessment, but I want that person to do 
it. And it sounds like you are committing to that. Is that 
correct?

    Dr. Makary. I will do an assessment, I commit to that, yes, 
Senator.

    Senator Collins. One of the best ways to lower the cost of 
prescription drugs is by promoting more market competition. And 
one way that we can do this is by making it easier for generic 
and biosimilar drugs to come to the market. As part of a 
broader bill that Senator Shaheen and I have introduced to help 
lower the cost of insulin, we've included a provision to create 
a new competitive biosimilar pathway and therapy designation to 
add FDA, under which eligible products for which there is 
inadequate biosimilar competition now, could achieve expedited 
review.

    I worked with the FDA in the last Congress, to develop this 
provision, and I look forward to continuing to push this 
concept so that it becomes law. Do you support the concept of a 
new expedited pathway for biosimilars to compete, for example, 
with branded insulin?

    Dr. Makary. First of all, Senator you've taken a strong 
interest in the FDA and I very much appreciate it, and I really 
enjoyed our time together. I've learned from you and thank you 
for your leadership on the Diabetes Caucus. It's something, of 
course, very close to my area of medicine.

    I am a big believer that we need to figure out a way to get 
biosimilars approved quicker without cutting corners on the 
scientific review. And it is one of several strategies that the 
FDA can do to try to alleviate the problems of high drug prices 
in inadequate competition or underperformance of competition 
and the drug shortage in the United States.

    Also, other strategies could include the way we look at 
generic drugs, moving medications to over the counter, does 
Naloxone really need to be a prescription only medication? Does 
an EpiPen need to be prescription only? If they can be over the 
counter and we can feel confident about public safety when with 
those products on the shelf at a pharmacy, it would force the 
companies to put a price on the shelf. And I do believe in 
price transparency, it will have an effect on the entire 
marketplace. So, thank you, Senator.

    Senator Collins. Thank you. And let me just end by saying 
that I am delighted with your interest in Islet cell therapy 
for individuals with Type I. There are clinical trials 
underway, and I think that is such an exciting development. 
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    The Chairman. Thank you, Senator Collins.

    Now Senator Hassan.

    Senator Hassan. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And good morning, 
Doctor, and congratulations to you and your family on your 
nomination.

    Dr. Makary. Good morning. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Hassan. President Trump has promised to help lower 
costs, but prescription drug prices are once again skyrocketing 
for Granite Staters, and all Americans. In 2025, drug makers 
have increased the list prices of over 500 common medications. 
Dr. Makary, when we met, you and I discussed the importance of 
increasing generic drug competition. If confirmed, will you 
work with me to speed the approval of generic drugs at FDA to 
lower drug costs for patients?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, first of all, I very much enjoyed our 
meeting together. The answer to your question is an emphatic 
yes, and I would add to that, that I would love to work with 
Congress to address the way that patent law has enabled patent 
thickening, which makes it more difficult for biosimilars and 
even some generics to come to market, because they got to 
navigate so many lawsuits and letter of the patent law.

    Senator Hassan. Well, and this is something that Senator 
Paul and I have actually been working on, and we have 
something, a bill called the Increasing Transparency in Generic 
Drug Applications Act, which would allow the FDA to communicate 
more transparently with generic drug manufacturers, in order to 
make more low-cost prescription drugs available for patients.

    The bill would save taxpayers over a billion dollars and 
has bipartisan, bicameral agreement. So, I'm going to urge all 
my colleagues to look at it. I've enjoyed working with Senator 
Paul and his team on it.

    Dr. Makary, you and I also discussed mifepristone when we 
met, a medication that has been used for decades in abortion 
care and miscarriage care. Now, during our meeting, you 
mentioned you weren't familiar with the drug, and I followed up 
by providing you with decades of the safety data and you said 
you're a data guy; you would review it. Have you reviewed the 
data, and do you agree that mifepristone is safe and effective?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator, for sending me that 
homework to read. And I did read those articles, including--and 
what I was referring to when I said I'm not familiar with it 
is, I don't believe I said I was not familiar with it, what I 
said was, I have not reviewed the totality of the data. I am 
very familiar with mifepristone. And I did review those 
studies, including two surveys of patients inquiring about 
telemedicine, a 2018 National Academy of Medicine Review. I'm a 
member of the National Academy of Medicine, but was not 
involved in that particular review. But I did review that 
document.

    Senator Hassan. I shared with you that study from the 
National Academies where scientists looked at, just so people 
know, over a hundred studies of medication abortion, and found 
that the literature is clear that mifepristone is safe and 
effective.

    Also, we've had the discussion about the REMS process for 
mifepristone. In 2021, the FDA looked again, based on a citizen 
petition asking them to review the safety of mifepristone. And 
I think--just so people get a sense, this is the report back 
from the FDA about their review and about their modification of 
the language in the REMS process. And their review again, was 
that it is safe and effective.

    I think what you're hearing from a lot of us as we ask you 
questions about this, and just so the public can understand, 
there's lots and lots of data here that supports the safety and 
efficacy of mifepristone and supports its efficacy in, under 
current law, and its safety.

    I think the concern you're hearing is not about whether you 
will follow an ongoing REMS process with any medication and 
look at the most current data. That's what the scientific 
process is about. The concern is whether you are going to 
unilaterally overrule the data that currently exists for 
political purposes, and for political reasons, and that's what 
we're looking for your reassurance on.

    You have told us you are an independent scientist, I 
believe that. You have a very distinguished career as a 
physician. But we need to know that when you say you're an 
independent scientist, that's really what you mean. And then 
when the politics get heated around abortion, that you won't 
abandon that independence.

    Dr. Makary. Senator, you have my commitment that once I'm 
in office, I will do a review of the data. I have no 
preconceived plans to make changes to the mifepristone policy. 
And I do plan to follow the law and the regulation of the REMS 
to look at ongoing data. It could be that there could be a 
drug-drug interaction that we could identify on ongoing data.

    Senator Hassan. I understand that. But what I am looking 
for is an understanding that the current state of science, in 
the process that you have been a participant in throughout your 
entire career, and that others up here have also participated 
in, that you will follow the science as it is currently 
developed and not unilaterally overrule scientists because 
you're under political pressure to do that.

    Dr. Makary. Senator, if you look at my track record, I have 
never been afraid to speak my honest scientific opinion, and I 
have no preconceived plans to make changes on that medication.

    Senator Hassan. Well, I wish you were hedging a little bit 
less today. Thank you,

    The Chairman. Senator Murkowski.

    Senator Murkowski. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And I 
understand that the Senator from Alabama has an engagement that 
she needs to get off to. So, I'm going to defer my time to her 
and go afterwards.

    The Chairman. The Florida, Alabama afterwards.

    Senator Moody. Florida Go Gators! But Katie Britt would 
want me to say, Roll Tide.

    [Laughter.]

    The Chairman. You'll lose your votes in Florida, but 
anyway, go ahead.

    Senator Moody. Thank you, Senator Murkowski, I'm so 
grateful. I'm very grateful as the rookie, to be able to 
question before these senior Senators. It's a big deal. So, I'm 
grateful to all of you. Thank you so much. I'm so honored.

    I am so excited to see you here today, I was incredibly 
happy with this nomination. When confirmed, I know you're going 
to do a great job. I have two issues I want to cover and they 
are relevant specifically to the two main roles in my life over 
the last 6 years: One as a mother and one as Attorney General 
of Florida.

    First, I want to talk to you about what is going on with 
the FDA, and it's burying its head in the sand about illegal, 
chemically ridden, extraordinarily high amounts of nicotine, 
Chinese vapes that are flooding the United States market. In 
fact, two thirds of the export market here are Chinese vapes 
coming out of China. So, it's unbelievable. They are in flavors 
like strawberry, blow pop, watermelon sour berry, attracting 
children, addicting children.

    We have so many thousands and thousands and thousands of 
pending applications, most of these things are illegal in the 
United States right now. But yet, somehow China has decided to 
flood our market with illegal vapes, the United States market 
with illegal vapes. And they're benefiting, in fact, in China, 
they banned flavored vapes. And so, all of the manufacturers 
there of these chemically ridden vapes, have now flooded our 
market, and now are addicting our children. Much like we're 
seeing this in many other ways in harmful substance coming from 
China and they're not doing much about it, fentanyl, ET cetera.

    Whoever comes in as the head of FDA, this is one of your 
problems-you have to address immediately. I know there are a 
lot of things that you're going to get questioned about, but 
these things are all over the United States. In convenience 
stores, they are, readily available to children. If you walked 
in any one right now, you would be able to find them. And not 
only are the amounts of nicotine going up and up and up, we 
don't know what is in these things. And there has been little 
to nothing done to deal with our pending applications at the 
FDA or to enforce those that we know are illegal right now. How 
would you address this and what do you plan to do on day one?

    Dr. Makary. Well, thank you, Senator. I appreciate your 
passion on this important issue, and I've appreciated your work 
as Attorney General in Florida on this issue, and maybe it's 
because you both believe in doing the right thing, and because 
you're a baseball mom that you're interested in this.

    Senator Moody. I first heard about this on the bleachers at 
a baseball game.

    Dr. Makary. I think there are four new vaping stores that 
have popped up in my neighborhood, all in the last few years. 
I've not walked into one of them, although perhaps I should, to 
check it out. But you are absolutely right that we are being 
flooded with Chinese products. We have no idea what's in these 
products and public health is not even going to be able to 
study them because it takes so long for public health research 
to catch up.

    But it's very concerning and it's not right that the 
products are banned in China, and yet they're manufacturing 
them and sending them into the United States. So, there are a 
few things the FDA can do to try to address this problem. First 
of all, the office of inspections and investigations has a lot 
of people with guns and they do enforcement and raids. And we 
need in collaboration with DOJ and other areas of law 
enforcement to try to address this problem of illegal products 
on our market.

    Senator Moody. There was an announcement during the last 
Administration, and I won't get into much--they were going to--
once people finally convinced them that this is out of control 
and people are getting addicted by the day, there was this big 
announcement about task force, we're going to use all the tools 
available. That's great, and enforcement needs to be key.

    Florida had to finally step up and do it ourselves because 
the Federal Government would do nothing. But the first key has 
to be, what do we do with our pending applications? How do you 
cleanup FDA's house first? You need to know what the law is 
before you can enforce it. Let's start there, please focus on 
that. And then we will also work with the enforcement measure.

    I'd also like to just get a commitment from you as from the 
State of Florida citrus growers, orange growers, that's a big 
deal to us. There's a regulation in there, an arbitrary 
regulation, amount of sugar content. It needs to be examined 
with disease and greening, and all the things facing the citrus 
industry. That arbitrary regulation, the oranges aren't 
producing as much sugar, I can go into it, but do I have your 
commitment for them to look at that regulation? Things that are 
set sometimes we need to revisit on how it's affecting 
industries across the United States. So, do I have your 
commitment to look at that?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I had my cold press freshly squeezed 
orange juice this morning, and you do have my commitment to 
look at that.

    Senator Moody. Oh, our orange growers are going to be so 
happy to hear that. I will tell them. Thank you so much.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you.

    The Chairman. That was the great mother board that told you 
to drink the orange juice, do you know what I'm saying? That 
was really good.

    Senator Kim.

    [Laughter.]

    Senator Kim. Thank you, Chairman. Doctor, thanks for coming 
on out. I was looking through your opening statement. At the 
very end, you talked about FDA being the gold standard, and you 
said gold standard of transparency, and I was glad to hear 
that. I wanted to ask you in terms of transparency, do you 
think it's important that we can ensure that there's public 
comments on actions of agencies and departments overseeing 
important aspects of our lives?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, first of all, it was good to meet with 
you, and I enjoyed our conversation. I do believe in civil 
discourse and have been an advocate for civil discourse and 
coming out of an era of medical establishment censorship. So, I 
do believe in the principle. Now, there are laws and 
regulations around public comment periods, and in some 
situations, a public comment period is required by a 
regulation.

    Senator Kim. I would just suggest here that this is really 
important, the public, very concerned you were talking about, 
we had a long conversation about how to restore trust. And I 
think a big part of that is about involving the public more, I 
think you saw some of that in terms of the questions regarding 
VRBPAC, and just the need for that type of radical transparency 
as Secretary Kennedy talks about.

    Recently, there was an effort addressing the Richardson 
waiver. I ask that you look into this if you're confirmed, but 
I do think it's important that we maintain public comments, 
something that so far, this HHS has not abided by, and 
something that has been longstanding practice.

    Another aspect of this is about transparency and 
accountability. So, I guess I just wanted to ask you if we have 
this sense of nothing to hide, we want to root out waste, 
fraud, corruption, do you support the roles of Inspector 
Generals?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I believe in the law, and I believe in 
the process of having Inspector Generals.

    Senator Kim. Okay. Well if you are confirmed, I just urge 
you to do everything you can to ensure that HHS has an 
Inspector General, has an ability for us to be able to oversee 
the accountability and to be able to root out some of the 
problems that I hope both of us can agree upon. So, I just want 
to ask for your commitment on that front that you would push to 
try to have an Inspector General there at HHS.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Kim. When it comes to ethics, I heard you refer 
about just concerns, you want to have ethics review in terms of 
positions that people might be having, especially involving 
approval of drugs and other things. I guess I wanted to just 
ask you a little bit more on your end. It looked like I come 
across something that's saying that you were willing to divest 
from your own investments that were being perceived potentially 
as a conflict of interest if you are confirmed in this job, is 
that correct?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, as you are aware, the Office of 
Government Ethics does a comprehensive review of basically 
everything I own, every stock, every equity, every share. I 
would describe it as a colonoscopy with a small bowel follow 
through.

    [Laughter.]

    Dr. Makary. It took about 4 weeks, and they gave me the 
option of resigning from some things, or maintaining a role, 
and I chose voluntarily to divest and resign from everything.

    Senator Kim. I applaud that, and I think that should be the 
standard, especially for such important jobs. I guess I just 
wanted to ask you a little bit further here, would you agree to 
recuse yourself from matters involving your former clients and 
employers, if that comes before you at the FDA?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, what I can promise you and commit to 
is, to abide by all the guidance of the Office of Government 
Ethics----

    Senator Kim. I understand that, but you just talked about 
how you voluntarily took steps to be able to divest. That was 
not something you were required to do, though I do think you 
should have been. But I guess I would just ask you again, would 
you consider recusing yourself? Because I mean, if you're 
making decisions about a previous client of yours, you can see 
how the general public would react to that in terms of concern 
about whether or not you are doing this for the best interest 
of the people or the best interest of people you know?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I have signed to agree to recusals as 
defined by the Office of Government Ethics in any area where 
they perceived a conflict could occur. And so, I have already 
agreed to the recusals required by the Office of Government 
Ethics.

    Senator Kim. One last thing I just wanted to raise, and 
this is just something I just want to ask, what is you're 
feeling about these potential Medicaid cuts that are being 
reviewed right now in Congress?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, the FDA is not involved in Medicaid or 
coverage decisions.

    Senator Kim. I understand that, I guess the reason I raise 
it is that in your opening remarks you said--I thought it was 
really powerful--you said that your motto in life has been 
about treating everyone in the community equally, especially 
the most vulnerable amongst them.

    I just urge you to just continue to press, you will have a 
seat at the table if you're confirmed on healthcare decisions 
across the Administration and Medicaid is essential for the 
most vulnerable amongst us. And treating everyone equally--your 
drugs, it's not just about the approval, you'd want to see that 
get into the hands of Americans, make sure that they can use 
and benefit from them. So, I do think that you have an interest 
in preserving Medicaid. Thank you.

    The Chairman. Senator Murkowski.

    Senator Murkowski. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Doctor, 
welcome. It was a good conversation that we had, I appreciated 
that, I thank you for the encouragement to read that provision 
in your book. So, airplane reading for me.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Murkowski. I also want to thank you for the 
assurance that you gave to Senator Collins regarding the 
Vaccine Advisory Committee and ensuring that there would be 
meetings going forward. I think for several of us who had, I 
thought good substance conversations with Secretary Kennedy, we 
had received assurances about things like the vaccination 
committee. So, making sure, again, that kind of very important 
input goes forward, I think is important to many of us. So, I 
appreciate that.

    I wanted to talk to you this morning about an issue that we 
discussed in my office, and that is with regards to ALS. The 
FDA's accelerated approval pathway has really been important, 
and I think very promising for treatments for ALS and some 
other rare diseases. You have advocated for using common sense 
alongside science in regulatory decisions. So, very briefly, 
how do we define common sense here as it applies to the 
regulatory decisions of FDA? How do we make sure that ALS 
patients who again, are looking at a very, very, very limited 
timeframe, they can't wait for the traditional approval 
process.

    There are some emerging measures using digital 
technologies, is this in your realm of common sense? Give me a 
little bit of your view here on how you would like to proceed 
on these accelerating approval pathways.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator and I very much enjoyed our 
time together and talking through a bunch of these issues. We 
have to customize the regulatory process to the condition that 
we're trying to be able to offer hope for. So, if a condition 
affects 19 people in the world, as a partial triplication 
chromosome 15 disorder does, or a disease that affects 52 kids 
in the world, we cannot require two randomized controlled 
trials. We have to customize the regulatory process to what 
we're trying to do, if our goal is to try to provide safe and 
effective therapies.

    I do believe firmly in that approach, and I think we can 
use some common sense to ask some big questions we've never 
asked before at the FDA. Why does it take 10 years for a drug 
to get approved? Why does a college student who suffers from 
chronic abdominal pain for years, and we have no idea what's 
going on, they go to Italy for a summer and they're suddenly 
cured of their abdominal pain. Why does a peanut allergy 
medication that's been safe with data for decades, get approved 
in Europe before the United States when nearly 10 percent of 
our population has a food allergy?

    I do think there's a lot of areas where we can ask, does a 
drug need to be prescription when it could be over the counter? 
Why are we requiring continuous glucose monitors to have a 
doctor's prescription? When it's good for people to use these 
monitors and learn about what they're eating. We don't just 
want to limit continuous glucose monitoring to people with 
diabetes, we want to prevent diabetes when 30 percent of our 
Nation's children has diabetes or pre-diabetes, or some form of 
early insulin resistance. Why are we holding these tools to 
help people empower them with knowledge about their health, 
until after they're sick? Same with continuous blood pressure 
monitoring.

    Senator Murkowski. It's as you point out, why do we wait? 
Now, we want to make sure that there is that level of safety, 
that's the job there through the FDA. But again, being able to 
accelerate these in ways that are meaningful and to your point, 
that actually fit with the population that you're speaking to. 
So, know that I'm going to be pushing you on this as well as 
many other advocates out there.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you.

    Senator Murkowski. I want to quickly ask you about food 
safety inspections. State and local governments conduct about 
60 percent of food processing facility inspections, 90 percent 
of produce safety inspections, a hundred percent of retail food 
inspections. What has happened is we have seen in the Biden 
administration, FDA planning to cut funding for state and local 
food safety programs. This impacts us in the State of Alaska 
when it comes to our seafood industry and in other areas.

    I'm looking for a commitment from you that under the Trump 
administration, the FDA is going to maintain funding for these 
contracts with state and local governments. They've proven that 
it's more cost effective, more efficient, and it also is what 
Congress has asked for. So, I'd like to know that you're going 
to be supportive in that regard with regards to state and local 
food.

    Dr. Makary. I'm happy to look at that with you, Senator.

    Senator Murkowski. Very good. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    The Chairman. Senator Blunt Rochester.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank 
you so much Dr. Makary for taking time to meet with me. I've 
found that most parents would do anything to keep their 
children safe and healthy, which is why we probably see so much 
intense debate on the best ways to protect our children. And 
the FDA has historically been seen as the authority on reliable 
information about public health issues related to medical 
products, food, tobacco, cosmetics, dietary supplements. 
However, people are getting their information in many different 
ways now, in many different places.

    We're faced with a growing challenge of opinions replacing 
scientific consensus and the proliferation of misinformation 
and disinformation. Parents need accurate science-based 
information to help make informed decisions for their children. 
How would you use your position as FDA commissioner, to compete 
with uninformed voices and to share evidence-based consensus-
driven information that is free from political influence?

    Dr. Makary. Well, thank you, Senator and I enjoyed our time 
meeting together. I believe very much in empowering people with 
good information, that's why I've written three bestselling 
books to try to educate people about health. And I do think you 
can explain to people with humility what we know and what we 
don't know, and then they're going to trust us more.

    Trust in doctors and hospitals is at a crisis right now. It 
was 71 percent in 2019, 71 percent of the public trusted us in 
2019, now it's down to 40 percent. That's a 31 point drop in my 
profession, that is a major problem. If we have the cure for 
pancreatic cancer, but only 40 percent of the public is going 
to come in and take it because the rest doesn't trust us, then 
that medication is only 40 percent effective.

    I think we fight bad ideas with more ideas. I don't believe 
in censorship of scientific opinions. I think we need a civil 
discourse. Unfortunately, we have a sort of toxic discourse 
right now in the United States and the politicalization of 
immune cells in some cases.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. One of my big concerns is who 
those voices are, and that they really are robust, 
scientifically trusted messengers as well. One of the other big 
issues that we're facing are drug shortages that have reached 
an all-time high, threatening access to products that we use 
every day, from IV bags to lifesaving drugs for cancer.

    It's particularly concerning for children's hospitals 
because of pediatric drugs and supplies that must be formulated 
to accommodate children's unique needs. Do you agree, and this 
is kind of a yes or no, do you agree that the FDA should play a 
leading role in mitigating drug shortages?

    Dr. Makary. I love yes and no questions.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Good. Can you, do it?

    [Laughter.]

    Dr. Makary. A leading role--they should take a role. I 
think the problem is much bigger than the FDA.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Yes or no, you're like not sure if 
it's a yes or no.

    Dr. Makary. I would refer you to my article in JAMA on this 
topic.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. I want to shift to clinical trials 
as well. You agreed, we talked about the importance of clinical 
trial diversity, but I want an assurance that you will stand up 
to any Trump administration actions that conflict with this. 
So, again, yes, or no, do you believe clinical trial diversity 
is critically important?

    Senator Blunt Rochester. That's the easy one.

    Dr. Makary. Well, if you're talking about a trial of sickle 
cell disease, are we saying that we need to have white people 
in a trial of sickle cell? I believe in common sense, and I 
believe in clinical trial diversity, both. And so, I believe if 
you're going to make results extrapolated to the general 
population, you should have results in those populations that 
you're making recommendations for.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. That one was an easy one. Do you 
think it is acceptable for the Administration to remove 
congressionally mandated guidance documents on clinical trial 
diversity?

    Dr. Makary. I'm not familiar with that.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Should you be confirmed, will you 
reinstate and finalize this document after you look at it as 
one of your first actions? Would you take a look at that? Could 
you commit to looking at that?

    Dr. Makary. Yes, Senator.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Good answer.

    [Laughter.]

    Senator Blunt Rochester. Will you restore the Web site for 
the Office of Minority Health and Health Equity?

    Dr. Makary. I'm not familiar with that Web site, Senator.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. If there was one and you knew 
there was one, would you restore the Web site that would 
provide information to the American people?

    Dr. Makary. I think you're asking me to make a decision on 
information that I don't have. So, you have my commitment to 
take a look at it.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. If you got the opportunity to 
review the Web site, and then know that it would help to spread 
real information, science-based information, would you 
reinstate that Web site?

    Dr. Makary. I would be happy to review it.

    Senator Blunt Rochester. I have more questions that I will 
send for the record, but particularly, I'm concerned also about 
the Vaccines for Children program and making sure with the--
you've heard our colleagues talk about the cancellation of the 
meeting. This is not just about cost for families, which is 
huge right now, but it's also about coverage. And so, I yield 
back my time and I thank you so much, Doctor.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Hawley. Thank you very much, Senator. Doctor, it's 
great to see you again, I enjoyed our conversation.

    Dr. Makary. Good to see you.

    Senator Hawley. Congratulations on your nomination and 
thank you for your willingness to take on this very important 
role. You've been asked about this several times already, but I 
just want to drill down a little bit further.

    In 2000, President Clinton's FDA approved a chemical 
abortion regimen with the drugs mifepristone and also 
misoprostol. Now, the FDA concluded that mifepristone could not 
be safely used, I'm quoting the FDA there, safely used, could 
not be, without special measures, it's the FDA's language. And 
in particular, the FDA mandated that prescribers needed to be 
licensed physicians who were able to diagnose and treat ectopic 
pregnancies to accurately determine the gestational age of the 
baby.

    The FDA further required that these drugs be administered 
and dispensed in person, that there be a day one in-person 
administration of the drug, a day three in-person 
administration of the second wave of the drug, a day 14 check-
in for complications. And the FDA further emphasized that given 
the potential risks of these drugs, physicians needed to be 
able to provide ongoing care.

    The FDA also said, ``The percentage of women who considered 
any particular adverse event as severe ranged from two to 35 
percent.'' And the FDA included what's called a black box 
warning, which you're very familiar with, which remains on the 
drug.

    Now, those restrictions were largely in place until just a 
couple of years ago, when the Biden administration, after the 
U.S. Supreme Court took up the Dobbs decision, granted cert on 
it. At that point, the Biden administration decided to 
eliminate 20 years of in-person dispensing requirements for 
this drug that didn't cite any studies that they said were 
adequate. That the FDA acknowledged that the studies that they 
looked at did not take into account the new protocols that they 
were issuing. They just eliminated two decades of in-person 
dispensing requirements.

    My question to you is, given the FDA's own findings on this 
drug over two decades, doesn't it make sense that the FDA 
returned to the pre political, before the political 
intervention of the Biden administration, the pre political 
protocol that requires in-person dispensing for chemical 
abortion drugs?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I appreciated our conversation prior 
to this hearing. I do think it makes sense to review the 
totality of data and ongoing data. I know personally of OB 
doctors who prefer to insist, even though they have the option 
to prescribe otherwise, but they choose to insist that 
mifepristone be taken, when necessary, in their office as they 
observe the person taking it. And I think their concern there 
is that if this drug is in the wrong hands, it could be used 
for coercion.

    Senator Hawley. Of course, you're familiar with the fact 
that now it's not merely that there's no requirement that it be 
ingested in the presence of a physician, there's no in-person 
dispensing requirement whatsoever. This is what the Biden 
administration--two decades of in-person dispensing 
requirements, the Biden administration eliminated those.

    Now, you've said several times, you'll review the data. You 
are aware that in 2016, the Obama FDA eliminated the 
requirement that physicians report adverse events with regard 
to mifepristone, aren't you?

    Dr. Makary. I believe they limited the data required to 
fatalities, but not adverse events.

    Senator Hawley. Will you put back in place the full 
reporting requirements that you can have a full range of data 
to evaluate?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I'm happy to look at that. I do 
believe in data, and I don't believe in pre-judging data before 
somebody has taken a look at data, including future data.

    Senator Hawley. Well, let me just say that, here's the 
deal. The FDA's rules were pretty consistent and pretty stable 
for 20 plus years, until suddenly the Dobbs decision appeared 
on the horizon. And when that happened, all of a sudden, we got 
massive changes in the dispensing requirements of this drug.

    I'll just point out that over 60 percent of abortions in 
the United States are now carried out with chemical drugs, with 
these drugs. They're not done in clinics; they're not done in 
hospitals, they're done with these drugs, without any kind of 
physician supervision, without any physicians there.

    If there's a serious adverse event--and I'll also just 
point out that if the Biden rules are allowed to stand, it 
doesn't matter what voters in the states, it doesn't matter 
what--this is a serious and very difficult moral issue, the 
case of life and abortion. And it won't matter what voters in 
the states say, because the Biden rules say now that 
bureaucrats can mail in abortion drugs to every single state, 
no in-person dispensing required. It doesn't matter what voters 
in the state have decided on the issue, it doesn't matter 
whatsoever.

    Now, if that's allowed to stand, we may as well just go 
back to having the Supreme Court make all the decisions. 
Because right now, Washington bureaucrats are making all the 
decisions, doctors are not involved. They're not in person 
dispensing, state voters are not involved. And I just want to 
register this is extremely concerning to me. It ought to be 
concerning to everyone who's concerned about women's safety, 
and also about what I thought was the position of this 
Administration, which is that it ought to be voters in the 
states and the relevant localities that are deciding this 
decision.

    I know you're familiar with this, doctor. I appreciate your 
commitment to the data. I hope that you'll look at the full 
range of data, and I hope we can count on you to protect 
women's health and the health of the unborn.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Hawley. [Presiding.] Well, Senator Kaine, let the 
record reflect, even though I have the gavel, I'm going to stop 
right now and turn it over to you.

    You're recognized, Senator.

    Senator Kaine. Thank you, Senator Hawley. Senator Hawley 
and I share a unique perspective. There are two sets of 
Senators who went to the same high school. Chuck Schumer and 
Bernie Sanders went to James Madison High School in Brooklyn, 
New York and Josh and I went to Rockhurst High School in Kansas 
City, so I just wanted to put that on the record.

    Dr. Makary, I loved the opportunity to visit with you and I 
know the answer to this question, but I just want to stress it 
again. You didn't have anything to do with the layoff of the 
thousand FDA employees that have been laid off in the last 
couple weeks, correct?

    Dr. Makary. That's correct, Senator.

    Senator Kaine. Do you know anything about the layoffs, for 
example, who made the decisions or what groups of people were 
laid off?

    Dr. Makary. I do not, Senator.

    Senator Kaine. You indicated that when you come into the 
office, you're going to do an assessment. And I suppose based 
on your experience, that if you look at this going forward, you 
think personnel policy, including layoffs, should be done 
strategically rather than just kind of willy nilly across the 
board randomly, correct?

    Dr. Makary. I am open to ideas on making government more 
efficient.

    Senator Kaine. Do you think willy nilly, random across the 
board, is a good idea or not a good idea?

    Dr. Makary. Look, I'm a surgeon, so I'm going to give you a 
surgical answer.

    Senator Kaine. Yes. Okay. That's good. It is a little bit 
puzzling; the Administration has high confidence in you. You've 
got this hearing right now, they expect you to be confirmed, 
probably will be based on practice of the notion that they 
would lay off a thousand people before you got there, is a 
little bit unusual. And what we're seeing in agencies, in the 
layoffs is that it is willy nilly random probationers get laid 
off because they can't fight back. Probationers are 
disproportionately veterans. I'm glad you will be a surgeon and 
act like a surgeon, should you be confirmed.

    Second thing I want to ask is about user fees. And we 
chatted a little bit about this in the office. We agreed that 
despite the need for reforms at the FDA, that the FDA is sort 
of the gold standard. I asked you, is there another nation that 
does this better than us? And you said, no, there wasn't. Even 
though, again, you've got reforms you'd like to make.

    Here is an issue that's pretty technical, but it's an 
important one. We talked about tracking adverse events after a 
drug or medical device is approved. And you indicated that the 
FDA can do a better job of identifying issues with problems 
that are already on the market. It's not all about approval and 
that it's about post-approval tracking.

    There are many different user fee programs that outline the 
relationship between the FDA and industry. And for most of the 
user fee programs except medical device user fee, FDA can use 
the collected user fee dollars to conduct post-marketing 
surveillance. But the medical device user fee program does not 
allow that use of the user fee dollars. Would you agree that 
the FDA should be able to use the user fees collected of 
medical devices to do post-approval surveillance?

    Dr. Makary. Senator user fees are established by Congress, 
and I'm more than happy to be a part of the conversation about 
the best use of those dollars within the agencies. I very much 
enjoyed our conversation, and I'm committed to an FDA that 
delivers more cures for Americans and meaningful treatments, 
healthy food for children----

    Senator Kaine. But can I just ask about this, do you think 
post-approval surveillance is something that's important?

    Dr. Makary. I am a big believer, Okay, in the idea that we 
should not just turn a blind eye after the FDA approves 
something. If we do that, we get burned with a million lives 
lost from Oxycodone and OxyContin without----

    Senator Kaine. That's my next topic. And I do agree with 
you that making that change would be on Congress's shoulders, 
but I do think it's odd that we don't allow the user fees to be 
used for post-approval surveillance on medical devices when we 
do in the other areas. And I'd love to work with you on that.

    On OxyContin, I want to just close with this one. We're 
seeing some improvements: 24 percent decline in drug overdose 
for the 12-month period ending in September, 2024 compared to 
previous year. And just yesterday, the NIH released findings of 
an NIH funded study researching a new pathway to address pain 
issues. But 87,000 Americans died of overdose in the 12-month 
period. So, it's an improvement, but we got so much farther to 
go.

    1 in 4 Virginians deal with chronic pain. And one of the 
issues you and I talked about is, can the FDA not just be in 
receive mode, to get the applications for approvals and 
approve? Can the FDA even be proactive in looking and saying, 
hmm, how come we don't have more non-opioid based pain 
management strategies? The FDA shouldn't be picking a winner 
among competitors, but to look at gaps and try to incentivize 
or encourage filling those gaps would be smart.

    Could you share some of your ideas for how we might 
encourage appropriately, the development of innovative 
strategies to address chronic pain without using opioids?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator. I do believe the FDA should 
not just be in receive mode, but also partner with industry and 
facilitate the process and ensure that the scientific review is 
independent, at the same time without cutting any corners on 
the independence of that review. The opioid pain problem can 
also be addressed by innovation, more localized treatments, and 
looking at post approval monitoring of devices.

    Senator Kaine. Great and thank you. I look forward to more 
discussion.

    Dr. Makary. Thanks, Senator.

    The Chairman. [Presiding.] Senator Tuberville.

    Senator Tuberville. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you, 
doctor, for being here.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Coach.

    Senator Tuberville. Also for your willingness to do this. 
World War II, we had to find ways to feed our troops. We knew 
nothing about preservatives and canning foods and ever since 
then, our food's going downhill because we have put everything 
in the world, in our food, No. 1, to get kids addicted to it, 
which we have. We've lost probably a couple of generations 
because of the obesity and diabetes.

    I have faith in this generation. I have two kids in this 
generation coming up, that they're looking at their health as a 
future. And they're fired up about nutrition being a good part 
of it.

    Are you familiar with GRASS--generally recognize safe 
foods, the chemicals that go into our foods. What's your 
thoughts on that? What's your thoughts on you as FDA director 
having the ability to look at this and know we're not using 
this chemical in this food. What's your thoughts?

    Dr. Makary. Well, first of all Senator Coach, I think you 
have had a perspective on this and been an advocate for healthy 
foods. And perhaps it's because of your unique position where 
you've worked with young people for so long. Half of our 
Nation's children are sick, and nobody has really been doing 
anything meaningful on this front until we have gotten new 
momentum and enthusiasm from Secretary Kennedy and President 
Trump to finally address the root causes of these diseases: 
General body inflammation and generalized insulin resistance, 
and food is a big part of it.

    When we eat foods with a lot of molecules that do not 
appear in nature, these are chemicals. These are chemicals that 
the industry insists are safe, a subset of which are 
concerning. There's a body of research now that suggests 
concern with some of these ingredients. We have to look at 
those ingredients, and you have my commitment to do so if 
confirmed as FDA commissioner.

    These chemicals are creating an inflammatory response in 
the gastrointestinal tract. And with an altered microbiome 
lining that GI tract, kids feel sick. It's not an acute 
inflammatory reaction, it's a chronic low-grade reaction, and 
they don't feel well. And what are we doing? We are drugging 
our Nation's children at scale. We have to reassess what we're 
doing because we're not on a good path right now.

    Senator Tuberville. I grew up in the South. I love fried 
foods. Okay. We fry everything, including snicker bars and 
Twinkies.

    [Laughter.]

    Senator Tuberville. But let me ask you this, I hear a lot 
about seed oils and the good and the bad, your thoughts?

    Dr. Makary. I think seed oils are a good example of where 
we could benefit from a consolidation of the scientific 
research. And I don't think it's any one ingredient in the food 
supply that's making our Nation's children sick with a 30 
percent rate of insulin resistance and diabetes in American 
teenagers today. That's a massive signal in the data.

    I think we have to look at the totality of every single 
thing in school lunch programs, in the diet of our Nation's 
children. When we're using tax dollars to make purchases of 
foods that we know make our Nation's children sick, we have to 
reexamine how we're spending those tax dollars.

    One thing I would like to work on is a school lunch 
program, for some school districts, on a pilot basis to 
transition to healthier foods. A lot of school districts want 
to, but they don't know how, and they may not have the funds. 
So, I've been discussing this with Jay Bhattacharya and others 
in the Administration, and I hope that's something we can do.

    Senator Tuberville. Thank you. Just a few months ago, we 
had the former FDA director, and I asked him about red dye No. 
3, and it was a pretty interesting conversation. Red dye No. 3, 
we've done studies on it, and we won't allow it in cosmetics, 
Okay? Because it causes cancer, but we are allowed to put it in 
our food and I'm a little bit confused.

    I'm a football coach, but I'm not that stupid. Put it on 
your face and put in your stomach, there's no difference. But 
he made an interesting statement that we're 20 years behind 
Europe, because Europe doesn't allow it in anything. We're 20 
years behind Europe on looking into red dye three and all the 
other dyes. What's your thoughts on dyes in this country?

    Dr. Makary. I agree with you that we--it did not make sense 
that red dye No. 3 was banned in cosmetics, but allowed in the 
food supply. And so, with two business days left in the Biden 
administration, there was an announcement to ban red dye No. 3 
in 2027 or 2028.

    Senator Tuberville. Why that long, we want to kill people 
for two more years. I mean, I would hope that you would, if 
you're confirmed, you go in and look at it very quickly and 
say, why do we want to put our people in harm's way? Thank you, 
Mr. Chairman.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, coach.

    The Chairman. Senator Hickenlooper.

    Senator Hickenlooper. Thank you, Mr. Chairman and thank 
you, Dr. Makary for your service. I finally got a chance to 
look over some of your three books, or you probably have more 
than that, but the three books that I was able to chase down, 
and they each one seemed provocative and full of answers. I 
will say, as a very, very slow reader, I'm a dyslexic, I do 
wish you had something like Cliff notes so that we could get 10 
or 15 pages concise and get the essence out of that.

    Dr. Makary. I'd be happy to personally summarize them for 
you Senator.

    [Laughter.]

    Senator Hickenlooper. I think we have witnesses that just 
heard that, I'm very excited. I appreciate your courage in 
taking on a lot of these traditional approaches and being so 
candid. Let me go through a couple of questions. In just a few 
weeks, roughly 10 percent of the FDA staff has been laid off. 
And most of these layoffs were inspectors who looked either at 
food supply, whether it was safety of medical devices and yet 
for the past several years, job vacancies, if you measure them 
as an indication of anything, but for FDA inspectors, job 
vacancies have been going up, not down. In other words, we have 
more unfilled spots, and now all of a sudden, we've laid off 10 
percent of the people there.

    That chaos and the understaffing is going to really present 
a serious morale issue, which I'm sure you're aware of. I don't 
know if you have any plans for that. And how are you going to 
be able to try and do the best you can to ensure the FDA's gold 
standard of science if we can't get enough inspectors?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, thank you for the question and I 
enjoyed our time together in your office. I was not involved in 
any personnel decisions.

    Senator Hickenlooper. That was not a criticism. I was just 
saying, once you get in the job, if your budget is suddenly 
diminished and you've got 10 percent fewer inspectors and you 
already didn't have enough by the existing measures, I'm not 
sure there's an answer for it. Maybe it's an unfair question.

    Dr. Makary. Senator, if confirmed, you have my commitment 
that I will do an assessment within the Agency of personnel, 
and it will be an ongoing assessment to ensure that the 
scientists and food inspectors have all the resources they need 
to do their job.

    Senator Hickenlooper. Great. Again, that's certainly the 
exact place to start. We have a bill, Skinny Labels, Big 
Savings Act that helps more generic drugs, more of that 
competition come into the market, lower drug costs.

    Again, with so many of the FDA workers having been fired 
and laid off, will there be sufficient people at the agency to 
review generic drug applications? Because that often gets 
pushed to the bottom of the heap, and yet it has dramatic 
savings, especially for elderly and people on the lower parts, 
the people that don't have insurance. So, are you worried about 
a slowdown, again due to resources and personnel?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I want to make sure that the reviewers 
and the review process is done properly without cutting any 
corners on the scientific independence and done expeditiously. 
So, you do have my commitment that I will do my best to ensure 
that that's done as best as possible.

    Just to put things in context, if I may. The FDA has almost 
19,000 employees, just over 18,000. That represents a 100 
percent increase since 2007. Now, I understand there were some 
layoffs recently, I understand some or many were hired back, 
but I just wanted to let you know that, to put things in 
context, we have seen a doubling of the agency in terms of 
number of employees since 2007.

    Senator Hickenlooper. Fair point, I accept that and was 
aware of that, but it's a fair point. Lot of talk about 
measles. Secretary Kennedy recommended the use of cod liver oil 
as one of several things that people could do and left it to 
parental discretion as to whether they would get their kids 
vaccinated, which I think you've got--I agree with that.

    I think the parents in the end have a right and a 
responsibility to make that decision for their kids. But it 
seemed to me that there could be a stronger--those of us who 
looked adept and in detail at the facts, that this is really a 
very safe vaccination for 99.99 percent of kids. And it saves 
lives and it prevents huge levels of very sick kids. You think 
there should be more, or will you be willing to be a more 
enthusiastic supporter of vaccinations while at the same time 
recognizing that parents get the final say?

    Dr. Makary. Senator vaccines save lives. And I do believe 
that any child who dies of a vaccine preventable illness is a 
tragedy in the modern era. The rare times in which a child dies 
of measles, it is often in the setting of a comorbid condition 
or severe malnutrition. And perhaps that is the rationale 
scientifically and physiologically as to why some 
supplementation in terms of nutrients may provide a benefit to 
children who are very sick and hospitalized with measles.

    Senator Hickenlooper. Right. And I don't deny that. Thank 
you. But I'm getting gaveled.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    Senator Hickenlooper. Thank you so much for your service.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    The Chairman. Senator Husted.

    Senator Husted. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Great to have you 
before the Committee. I enjoyed Dr. Makary the conversation we 
had in my office. And I want to just give you a chance to share 
some thoughts kind of building on what I'm sure others have 
asked you.

    I am deeply concerned about how much inflationary cost the 
healthcare system has created for the American public over the 
last decade in the 21st century. We talk about inflation around 
here, the most inflationary cost affecting consumers, 
businesses, the American public, the American taxpayer is 
healthcare costs. We seem to spend more, get worse outcomes.

    You look at the fact that from the earliest stages we have 
children who are unhealthier, worse diets, more obesity, which 
lead to problems like diabetes, lower quality of life, lower 
productivity as they go through life, higher costs in the 
healthcare system, that continues to manifest through life on 
all those fronts. And then the government and the taxpayers end 
up paying for all of it through Medicare and Medicaid. It is 
driving us into bankruptcy in some levels and costing people 
and families the ability to afford to live. And so there are 
lots of ingredients to that.

    How do we take cost out of the healthcare system, whether 
it is making people healthier and in making this whole system 
sustainable for the long run.

    Dr. Makary. Well thank you Senator Husted, and it's good to 
see the Cavaliers doing great this year. I hope this is their 
year to win it all. I enjoyed our time in your office.

    Senator Husted. We only have one championship in Cleveland. 
That was when LeBron was there.

    [Laughter.]

    Dr. Makary. First of all, you are a hundred percent 
correct, and this is something I'm very passionate about. 
Healthcare costs are spiraling out of control, and its 
burdening everyday American businesses and families. It's 
getting more and more difficult to compete with businesses 
overseas because of healthcare costs. It outpaces inflation.

    When we are spending money that we don't have as a country, 
it drives inflation and inflation is a backhanded dirty tax on 
the poor. It doesn't affect the wealthy; it affects the poor. 
And that's why we've got to address healthcare spending. We've 
heard of many different ideas out there, but the main root 
issue is the health of the population, and it is getting worse. 
75 percent of adults have some comorbid condition or diabetes 
or pre-diabetes, or are overweight or obese. 3 in 10 teens now 
have insulin resistance, that's not good for our future as a 
country.

    Thanks to President Trump and Secretary Kennedy for the 
first time, we're talking about root causes, both on a research 
basis and in terms of what we can do at every agency. And 
within the FDA, I do think there are things we can do to help 
empower people, by facilitating this independent scientific 
review of devices and other ways to prevent chronic diseases 
with continuous glucose monitoring, continuous blood pressure 
monitoring, and healthy foods for children.

    If confirmed, my goals are very clear at the FDA, more 
cures, and meaningful treatments for Americans, including 
diagnostics, healthy food for children, and rebuilding the 
public trust.

    Senator Husted. Great. I look forward to working with you 
on all those issues, as I'm sure many of the Members of this 
Committee do. One way that we can drive more efficiency and 
speed to market for things that can improve lives and hopefully 
lower costs is through technology. I know that I was involved 
with the Cleveland Clinic when they got the first quantum 
computer focused on healthcare research, and you use things 
like quantum and AI to drive discoveries, speed to market with 
these. Could you talk about how the FDA under your leadership 
would think about those things?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator. I think there's a number of 
opportunities with AI right now that we have, that we've never 
had before. We have an incredible opportunity to use AI to help 
reviewers in the review process, not to replace the human 
reviews, but to aid them and assist them in the same way that 
EKGs are read by AI devices that tell us normal sinus rhythm at 
the bottom of the EKG. Now, we still look at the rhythm, but it 
aids and it may help the efficiency among the reviewers.

    We can use AI also in drug design and drug development. 
Now, that's not something the FDA does, but the FDA can help 
provide data to help train machine learning models to help 
design AI systems that can predict toxicities, adverse events, 
and even cures for some conditions.

    Finally, AI can be used to aid with data monitoring in a 
post-approval setting. So, we don't learn 5 years after Vioxx 
is approved that 38,000 Americans died from it. Thank you.

    The Chairman. Thank you, Senator Husted.

    Now Senator Markey.

    Senator Markey. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'm from Boston, 
the home of the World Champion, Boston Celtics. Good luck to 
the Cavaliers.

    [Laughter.]

    Senator Markey. But we'll have a little bet. You stated 
that you want to ensure that the FDA holds the gold standard of 
trusted science and transparency. In order for that to happen, 
the FDA commissioner must also uphold the gold standard for 
trusted science and transparency.

    In your financial disclosures, you disclosed that you made 
over half a million dollars from Global Appropriateness 
Measures LLC. The client list for that company includes 
companies that are interested in making money off of the 
healthcare system, insurance companies, hospital chains, 
private equity backed companies. So, can you tell the Committee 
how much you made from those private equity and venture capital 
backed companies?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, first of all, thank you for the 
question, and I enjoyed our conversation prior to this hearing. 
I'm very proud of my work at Global Appropriateness Measures. 
The purpose of the endeavor, was to lower healthcare costs for 
Americans by reducing unnecessary surgery and medications----

    Senator Markey. I appreciate that. Just for the record, can 
you just tell us how much you made from the private equity and 
venture capital backed companies?

    Dr. Makary. I have been a shareholder in Global 
Appropriateness Measures. I am fully divesting, I don't have 
the exact numbers at my fingertips, but they were all disclosed 
to the Office of Government Ethics, and they're all part of the 
disclosure system.

    Senator Markey. Was it in the millions of dollars or less?

    Dr. Makary. Over the course of what period of time?

    Senator Markey. Over the period of time that you had a 
relationship with them.

    Dr. Makary. There was revenue of that company in the 
millions of dollars. Yes. And I am one of the shareholders of 
that company, and I am very proud. The best way to lower drug 
prices in the United States are to stop taking drugs we don't 
need. So, I do believe in the appropriateness of care, and that 
endeavor was designed to create software, so we can monitor----

    Senator Markey. I appreciate that. And we're just looking 
at the transparency issue, so I'm just trying to help you to be 
transparent here. So how much were you paid by insurance 
companies, including devoted health services and insurance 
company that primarily sells Medicare Advantage plans?

    Dr. Makary. Yes, that figure is in the Office of Government 
Ethics Report. I don't have that exact number at my fingertips. 
And of course----

    Senator Markey. Was that in the millions of dollars as 
well?

    Dr. Makary. No, that was far less. And again, I'm one of 
the shareholders of that company.

    Senator Markey. Well, I think the American people do 
deserve your full transparency about how you might be 
influenced by the healthcare industry, insurance companies, 
private equity, and venture capital funds. And that's what I'm 
trying to get at here.

    Dr. Makary. Yes, all of those reports will be public 
Senator.

    Senator Markey. They will be public, they're not public at 
this point. So, I'm not in a position to ask you about them. 
And that's why I'm asking you if----

    Dr. Makary. Office of Government Ethics releases it at a 
certain point of time.

    Senator Markey. But it's not helpful for the confirmation 
hearing, which is essential in terms of the public 
understanding, all of the potential, not actual, but potential 
conflicts of interest that might show up. The FDA is 
responsible for approving medical devices or drugs that may 
impact how much insurance companies pay or what they cover. The 
same insurance companies that do overcharge Americans and 
undercover their care. It will impact hospital costs and 
private equity.

    You're coming into this role with relationships 
preexisting, that have a profit interest in the decisions that 
you will be responsible for making. That's why I'm raising 
these issues. Will you commit today to not participating in any 
decisions that would have an impact on known clients of Global 
Appropriateness Measures during your tenure as FDA 
commissioner?

    Dr. Makary. First of all, Senator, I appreciate your 
enthusiasm on this topic. I am one of the biggest advocates 
that was involved in the health insurance industry transparency 
of the secret negotiated rates. So, I'm a big--I'm with you. 
The recusals that I will be taking are a hundred percent in 
line with the Office of Government Ethics recommendations, 
which were not to resign from everything, but I chose to resign 
from everything to ensure no appearance of a conflict of 
interest.

    Senator Markey. That's important for us to hear. And the 
same thing, will you commit today to not participating in any 
decisions that would have an impact on private equity and 
venture capital investors of those clients as well?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I commit to following the Office of 
Government Ethics Agreement.

    Senator Markey. Well again, it's just so important for us 
to understand this going forward, because of obviously the 
increasing role that those sectors are now playing, and they 
will be attempting to influence FDA decisions. So that's the 
reason why I'm raising the questions and total transparency is 
absolutely necessary. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    The Chairman. Thanks. And I'll note that as you mentioned 
that all your financial records have been with the Office of 
Governor Ethics.

    Senator Banks.

    Senator Banks. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. On that note, 
doctor, you've been very transparent, right?

    Dr. Makary. I believe so.

    Senator Banks. Talk about that process. I mean, how 
transparent you have to be to get to this point today.

    [Laughter.]

    Dr. Makary. Well, there was a massive disclosure of 
basically every single share of everything that I own. And that 
process took a number of weeks and I would describe it as a 
colonoscopy with a small bowel follow through. And everything 
is out there and basically, I will have essentially no privacy 
when the Office of Government Ethics chooses to release that 
form. But that's Okay. I'm proud of everything that I've done, 
and I'm more than happy to acknowledge that I've agreed to 
divest or resign from everything.

    Again, I was given the option not to resign from 
everything, but I chose to resign from everything, because I 
want to ensure independence. This is not a job I'm taking to 
audition for my next job. This is a job I'm doing to serve the 
American public. I believe in more cures and meaningful 
treatments, healthy food for children, and rebuilding the 
public trust. So, Senator, I can commit to you that I am 
absolutely dedicated to that mission, and I am not there to 
audition for a future job.

    Senator Banks. I appreciate that, because this is so 
important. I mean, you've been nominated for this position 
because you're incredibly accomplished, your background 
perfectly fits the role that you're about to take, and you 
bring experiences and success to the table to be the new head 
of the FDA and change it.

    Because you've talked about this, you mentioned in your 
testimony that healthcare has become too fragmented, too cold, 
and too corporate, right? I mean and you're going to go there 
to shake that up and change that. The Make America Healthy 
again movement, that was a big part of giving this President a 
giant mandate with Secretary Kennedy and others who are coming 
to the table, the role that you're going to play is really 
important to that, to disrupt it.

    I think we all agree, that I think the American people 
agree, that the medical establishment is often condescending 
toward the American people, it is something that we have to 
disrupt and change. Can you talk about how you're going to do 
that at the FDA?

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator. And I do agree a hundred 
percent that for the first time ever, President Trump and 
Secretary Kennedy had moms that were Republican, Democrat, 
independent, come out and vote because they care deeply about 
the health of our Nation's children.

    They want to see healthier food for children. They want to 
see an industry that has, they want to see an FDA that is 
independent of corporate influence, but at the same time 
working with partnerships around the country to facilitate, not 
just being a receive only mode. So, one of my goals is to 
ensure that the FDA maintains its scientific integrity and that 
we can do what we can to contribute to the Make America Healthy 
again spirit.

    Senator Banks. Very good. Clinical and nonclinical testing 
are both very important parts of FDA's drug approval process. 
How do we modernize that process? Modernize testing?

    Dr. Makary. Well, first of all, there are steps in the 
regulatory process where we can take a look and ask, do we need 
to use the same processes that we've been using? Infant 
formula, for example, has had the same recipe for the last 40 
years. And so, with the exception of Selenium, which was added 
in 2015, for 40 years we're requiring infant formula companies 
to use a standard recipe that was developed back when the food 
pyramid was misleading Americans and basically government 
misinformation.

    Can we take another look at that? Can we create other ways 
in which new products can be brought to market safely? Can we 
look at real world data from European products? The more 
competition, the more resiliency in the supply chain, and the 
lower the risk of a shortage in the future. So, does infant 
formula need to go through the same process as a new drug? Or 
can we look at real world data and work with the companies to 
figure out a smarter way that uses both trusted science and 
common sense, which is a theme I would like if confirmed.

    Senator Banks. I want to work with you on that. The FDA is 
starting to allow patients to choose whether they want 
prescription drug instructions on paper or digitally, seems 
like common sense. But medical device instructions are still 
required to be on paper. Would you support changing that 
requirement?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, my understanding is that's a 
requirement set by Congress, and I would be more than happy to 
work with you and Members of Congress to take a look at that.

    Senator Banks. Do you have an opinion on it?

    Dr. Makary. I've heard arguments on both sides. One thing 
that people have raised is that, on one hand it may be a waste 
of paper, it's a lot of paper. On the other hand, seniors may 
not go to a Web site to look at the information. So, I think 
there are arguments on both sides. I would welcome the 
opportunity to work with you on reforming.

    Senator Banks. Thank you. I yield back.

    The Chairman. Senator Banks, thank you.

    Senator Alsobrooks.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Thank you so much, Mr. Chairman. Good 
morning, Dr. Makary.

    Dr. Makary. Good morning.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Good to see you here. I'm going to just 
feed off of something my colleague just mentioned, some words 
that I think are significant. He said the medical establishment 
is condescending to the American people. And I'd like to offer 
that, unfortunately because this Administration has been so 
reckless in the way that it has handled civil servants, I 
believe they've been very condescending to many of them as 
well. And they are for the most part, many of them are my 
constituents, who work in institutions like John Hopkins and 
who are serving the people. And many of the actions of this 
Administration have been quite chaotic and confusing.

    I want to just draw you to a few things. The committee 
staff raised last week, a memo that was put out by OPM, and 
this memo directed agencies to dramatically reduce staff and 
then they reversed themselves and I'm not sure whether you've 
seen the latest guidance from OPM this week, which backtracked 
that directive to fire employees, instead said they clarified 
by saying that decisions to fire should be left to individual 
agencies.

    I'd like to just ask you, given this updated guidance, 
whether we have your assurance here today at this hearing, that 
you will not arbitrarily fire employees at FDA, given the new 
guidance.

    Dr. Makary. First of all, Senator, good to see you and I 
enjoyed our conversation. And I'm very proud to work at Johns 
Hopkins in the State of Maryland. And I'm a big believer in the 
professional career staff at the FDA, which is also located by 
and large, most of the employees are in Maryland. And so, you 
have my promise that if confirmed, I will do my own independent 
assessment on personnel.

    I welcome input on efficiencies at the agency, at the same 
time, I want to make sure that the scientists and food 
inspectors and staff central to the core mission of the agency, 
have all the resources they need to do their job well.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Thank you. And as you mentioned, there 
are so many valuable members. FDA does a tremendous service for 
our Country. They handle, for example, drug safety. When we 
think about reviewing medical devices, and you mentioned infant 
formula, where the men and women who are designated as the 
people who would make sure that those items are safe, are the 
ones who've been terminated.

    I would like to know whether you would commit then to 
rescinding the termination of scientists who were working, for 
example, to address the bird flu?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, I was not involved in any of those 
personnel decisions, but if confirmed, I will certainly do an 
assessment.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Okay. You'll go back and look at those 
terminations?

    Dr. Makary. Happy to Senator.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Okay. Thank you. As well as the 
termination of the individuals and FDA's food division, the 
people who keep our food safe. And so, you would commit then to 
going back and looking at those terminations to make an 
independent assessment?

    Dr. Makary. Of course, happy to.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Okay. And in the same vein, I wonder 
whether you realize that many of FDA's salaries, you may 
already know this, are paid in large, not by taxpayers, but by 
user fees. Are you familiar with that?

    Dr. Makary. Yes, I am Senator.

    Senator Alsobrooks. The concept that the reason to 
terminate these employees is to save taxpayer dollars is one 
that's based on a premise that is largely not true. Since we 
use the user fees for many of the salaries, and that being the 
case, I wonder whether you would commit them to rehiring their 
100 employees who were fired from FDA's Tobacco Center, which 
is 100 percent funded by user fees. Will you commit to going 
back and looking to rehire the 100 who were terminated?

    Dr. Makary. Senator, if an employee has not logged onto 
their VPN in 2 years, then I don't want to rehire that 
individual. But if there are people that deserve a look, of 
course, I'm happy to look at that.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Right? We're talking about, again, 
there's a big lie out there that says, these civil servants are 
lazy, they are shiftless, they don't show up. That is by and 
large, not true. So, asking you if you would go back and look 
at the ones who have been summarily terminated without cause, 
and your answer to that has been, yes, you will go back and 
make your own independent assessment.

    Dr. Makary. I will do an assessment if confirmed, Senator. 
Thank you.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Okay. Thank you. And finally on 
Tuesday, DOGE made the GSA release a list of over 400 
government buildings that they want to dispose of. And many of 
these are in White Oak Campus, which is in Maryland. One of 
them is in a building called Building Number One. And I wonder 
whether you're familiar with building Number One?

    Dr. Makary. I'm not familiar with the numbering of the 
building, Senator. I'm sorry.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Well, that's where your office would 
be. And that's one of the buildings that the DOGE has put on 
the list to close shutter and close up. And so, again, just 
pointing out that many of these decisions are arbitrary, that 
they harm the work that we do and harm the American people. And 
just wanted to ask you if you would be committed to making 
decisions that make sense and that do not eliminate the FDA.

    Dr. Makary. I believe in common sense and trusted science. 
And if confirmed, you have my commitment to do an assessment of 
personnel, to look at efficiencies. I welcome the input of any 
organization, of any individual Member of Congress, from the 
Administration, and the DOGE team as well, to figure out how 
the government can be more efficient.

    Senator Alsobrooks. Thank you so much, doctor.

    Dr. Makary. Thank you, Senator.

    The Chairman. Thank you, Dr. Makary.

    I'd like to submit for the record a Washington Post article 
referenced by a HELP Committee witness, an abortion survivor, 
Melissa Ohden, regarding a woman who took mifepristone twice, 
including once obtaining it online and taken outside the FDA's 
10-week indication window. She still delivered her baby. While 
FDA has conducted safety studies on the product, I'm not aware 
that they've studied any safety outcomes related to a child who 
might still be born.

    As a physician, sending women abortion pills without a 
complete evaluation of the gestation of her pregnancy or 
checking for an ectopic pregnancy is clearly a safety issue. 
And that's why I would urge Dr. Makary to return the REMS 
policy in place during the first Trump administration, 
requiring an in-person visit.

    [The following information can be found on page 38 in 
Additional Material:]

    The Chairman. With that, this concludes our hearing. And 
I'll just say that I know your family's incredibly proud of 
you, and I just thank them for being here as well. Believe me, 
you're on for a ride. So, thank you for volunteering. For any 
Senators who wish to ask additional questions, questions for 
the record will be due tomorrow at 5 p.m. This concludes the 
hearing.

                          ADDITIONAL MATERIAL
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT

    [Whereupon, at 11:47 a.m., the hearing was adjourned.]