Authors: Arthur Hailey
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fiction - General, #Medical, #drugs, #Fiction-Thrillers, #General & Literary Fiction, #Thrillers
application was withdrawn from the FDA. Canada, inexplicably, left the drug
on sale until March--four months later than the Australian withdrawal and
time for many more individuals, including pregnant women, to take it.
Celia and Andrew, who followed the grim story by reading scientific
publications as well as the regular press, discussed it frequently.
One night at dinner Celia said, "Oh, Andrew, how glad I am you wouldn't let
me take any drugs during pregnancy!" A few minutes earlier she had looked
with love and gratitude at their own two healthy, normal children. "I could
have taken Thalidomide. I hear there are doctors' wives who did."
Andrew said quietly, "I had some Kevadon myself
" You did?"
"I was given samples by a detail man."
Jolted, Celia said, "But you didn't use them?"
Andrew shook his head. "I'd like to say I had a suspicion about the drug,
but it wouldn't be true. I simply forgot they were there."
"Where are the samples now?"
"Today I remembered them. I pulled them out. There were several hundred
tablets. I read somewhere that more than two and a half million were
distributed to American doctors. I've flushed mine down the toilet."
"Thank God."
"I'll second that."
In the months that followed, more news about Thalidomide continued to flow
in. It was estimated that twenty thousand deformed babies were born in
twenty countries, though the exact number would never be known.
In the United States the number of phocomelia births was Iowan estimated
eighteen or nineteen-because the drug had never
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been approved for general use. Had it been approved, the number of armless
and legless American babies would probably have reached ten thousand.
"I guess we all owe a debt to that woman Kelsey," Andrew commented to
Celia on a Sunday in July 1962. He was at home, relaxing, a newspaper
spread out before him in the den they shared.
"Kelsey" was Dr. Frances Kelsey, an FDA medical officer who, despite
intense pressure from the drug firm which planned to market
Thalidomide-Kevadon, used bureaucratic tactics to delay it. Now,
declaring she'd had scientific reasons for doubting the drug's safety all
along, Dr. Kelsey was a national heroine. President Kennedy had awarded
her the President's Gold Medal for Distinguished Service, the country's
highest civilian decoration.
"As it turned out," Celia said, "what she did was right, and I agree
about being grateful. But there are some who say she got the medal for
doing nothing, just putting off making a decision, which is always the
safe thing for a bureaucrat to do, and now she's claiming to have had
more foresight than she really did. Also, it's feared that what Kennedy
has done will mean that in the future, good drugs that are truly needed
will be delayed by others at FDA who'd like a medal too."
"What you have to understand," Andrew said, "is that all politicians are
opportunists and Kennedy's no exception, nor is Kefauver. Both of them
are using the pubhcity about Thalidomide for their own advantage. Just
the same, we need some kind of new law because whatever else Thalidomide
did, it sure as hell showed that your industry, Celia, can't regulate
itself and that parts of it are rotten."
The remark was prompted by revelations, following investigations into the
drug firms responsible for Thalidomide, of duplicity, callousness, greed,
cover-up and incompetence, revelations that seemed to surface almost
daily.
Celia acknowledged sadly, "I wish I could argue with you. But no one in
their right mind could."
Surprisingly, and despite the political maneuvering that preceded it,
some good legislation did emerge and was signed into-law by President
Kennedy in October 1962. While far from perfect, and with provisions
which later would deny valuable new drugs to those in desperate need of
them, the new law provided consumer safeguards that had not existed
"B.T." which was how many in the
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drug industry would in future identify the era of "before Thalidomide."
Also in October the news reached Celia that Eli Camperdown, president and
CEO of Felding-Roth, who had been ill for several months, was dying. The
cause was cancer.
A few days after she heard, Sam Hawthorne summoned Celia to his office.
"Eli has sent a message. He would like to see you, He's been taken home
from the hospital and I've arranged for you to be driven there tomorrow."
The house was five miles southwest of Morristown at Mount Kemble Lake.
Located at the end of a long driveway and shielded from outside view by
trees and heavy shrubbery, it was large and old, with a frontage of
fieldstone which had weathered and taken on a green patina. From the
outside the interior looked dark. Inside, it was.
A stooped, elderly butler let Celia in. He led her to an ornate drawing
room furnished with heavy period pieces and asked her to wait. The house
was quiet, with no sounds of activity. Perhaps, Celia thought, it was
because Eli Camperdown lived alone; she knew he had been a widower for
many years.
In a few minutes a uniformed nurse appeared. In contrast to the
surroundings, she was young, pretty and brisk. "Will you please come with
me, Mrs. Jordan. Mr. Camperdown is expecting you."
As they climbed a wide, curving staircase with deep carpeting Celia
asked, "How is he?"
The nurse said matter-of-factly, "Very weak and in a good deal of pain,
though we use sedation to help him with that. Not today, though. He said
he wished to be alert." She looked at Celia curiously. "He's been looking
forward to your coming." Near the head of the staircase the nurse opened
a door and motioned Celia in.
At first Celia had difficulty in recognizing the gaunt figure propped up
by pillows in the large four-poster bed. Eli Camperdown, who not long
since had seemed the embodiment of strength and power, was now emaciated,
wan and fragile-a caricature of his former self. His eyes, sunk in their
sockets, regarded Celia as his face twisted in an attempt to smile. When
he spoke his voice was low and reedy. "I'm afraid advanced cancer isn't
pretty, Mrs. Jordan. I hesitated about letting you see me like this, but
there are things I wanted to say to you directly. I thank you for
coming."
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The nurse had brought a chair before leaving them alone and Celia sat in
it beside the bed. "I was glad to come, Mr. Camperdown. I'm just sorry
you are ill."
"Most of my senior people call me Eli. I'd be glad if you would do that."
She smiled, "And I'm Celia."
"Oh yes, I know. I also know you've been important to me, Celia." He
raised a frail hand and motioned to a table across the room. "There's a
Life magazine over there, some papers with it. Would you pass them to
me?"
She found the magazine and papers and brought them. With effort, Eli
Camperdown began leafing through the issue of Life until he found what
he was seeking.
"Perhaps you've seen this."
"The article about Thalidomide, with the photos of deformed babies? Yes,
I have."
He touched the other papers. "These are more reports and photographs;
sonic haven't reached the public yet. I've been following the case
closely. It's awful, isn't it?"
"Yes, it it."
They were silent, then he said, "Celia, you know I'm dying?"
She answered gently, "Yes, I know."
"I made the damn doctors tell me. I've a week or two, at best; perhaps
only days. It's why I had them bring me home. To finish here." As she
started to speak, he stopped her with a gesture. "No, hear me out."
He paused, resting. Clearly the effort made so far had tired him. Then
he went on.
"This is selfish, Celia. None of it will do those poor, innocent children
any good." His fingers touched the photos in the magazine. "But I'm glad
I'm dying without that on my conscience, and the reason I don't have it
there is you."
She protested, "Eli, I believe I know what you're thinking, but when I
suggested . . ."
He continued as if not hearing her. "When we at Felding-Roth had that
drug, we planned to push it hard. We believed it would be big. We were
going to test it widely, then pressure the FDA to pass it. Maybe it would
have passed. Our timing would have been different; there could have been
another examiner. There's not always logic to these things."
He paused again, mustering his strength and thoughts. "You per-
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suaded us to do the tests on old people; because of that, no one under
sixty took it. It didn't work. We dropped it. Afterward I know there was
criticism of you ... But if it had happened . . . the way we intended in
the beginning . . . then I'd have been responsible . . ." Again his
fingers found the photos in the magazine. "I'd have died with that
terrible thing upon me. As it is . . ."
Celia's eyes were misty. She took his hand and told him, "Eli, be at
peace."
He nodded and his lips moved. She leaned closer to hear what he was
saying. "Celia, I believe there is something you have: a gift, an
instinct, for judging what is right . . . Big changes are coming in our
business, changes I won't see . . . Some in our company believe you are
going far. That's good . . . So I'll give you some advice, my last advice
. . . Use your gift, Celia. Trust your good instincts. When you have
power, be strong to do what you believe . . . Don't let lesser people
dissuade you - . ."
His voice drifted off. A spasm of pain contorted his face.
Celia turned, aware of movement behind her. The young nurse had come into
the room quietly, She had a syringe on a tray which she put down beside
the bed. Her movements were efficient and quick. Leaning over her patient
she asked, "Is it pain again, Mr. Camperdown?" As he nodded feebly, she
rolled back the sleeve of his pajamas and injected the syringe's contents
into his arm. Almost at once his facial tension eased, his eyes closed.
"He'll drift now, Mrs. Jordan," the nurse said. "I'm afraid there isn't
much point in your staying." Again she regarded Celia curiously. "Did you
finish your talk? It seemed important to him."
Celia closed the Life magazine and put it, with the papers, back where
she had found it.
"Yes," she said. "Yes, I think so."
Somehow-though not from Celia, who kept her own counsel-a report of her
encounter with Eli Camperdown filtered through the company. As a result
she found herself regarded with a mixture of curiosity, respect, and
occasionally awe. No one, including Celia, had any illusion that some
exceptional insight had prompted her suggestion five years earlier about
Felding-Roth's testing of Thalidomide, testing that turned out to be
unsuccessful. But the fact was, the route the company took had saved it
from what could have been disaster, and Celia's contribution to that
route was cause enough for gratitude.
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