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Bush Administration Can't Stop Spinning

by TChris

Following on the heels of Wednesday's criticism by leading scientists of the Bush administration's suppression or distortion of scientific evidence to provide a smokescreen for its unscientific approach to the environment, health care, and arms control, the administration admitted that "it improperly altered a report documenting large racial and ethnic disparities in health care."

The theme of the original report was that members of minorities "tend to be in poorer health than other Americans" and that "disparities are pervasive in our health care system," contributing to higher rates of disease and disability.

But that theme doesn't mesh well with the administration's cheery view of an America where racial inequality is a thing of the past, so the administration adopted its usual spin strategy: when the facts are inconvenient, ignore them or change them. And so,

the final report has an upbeat tone, beginning, "The overall health of Americans has improved dramatically over the last century."

The authors of the report by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, led by Dr. Carolyn Clancy, resisted the bureaucratic pressure to doctor the report, but in the end gave in.

"No data or statistics in the report were altered in any way whatsoever," Dr. Clancy said. But a close reading of the evolving report shows that some entries in statistical tables were deleted from the final version.

As noted by Georgetown Prof. M. Gregg Bloche, a member of the National Academy of Sciences,

"The administration's report does not fabricate data, but misrepresents the findings. It submerges evidence of profound disparities in an optimistic message about the overall excellence of the health care system."

Par for the course in the Bush administration. The spinning never ends.

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