Below is the disappointing response from the Department of Health...
Thank you for your further email of 2 February to the Department of Health about statins.
I hope it is helpful if I first explain that the Customer Service Centre is an integral part of the Department of Health, staffed by civil servants. The Centre has been set up to reply on behalf of Health Ministers to enquiries and correspondence from members of the public (letters, e-mails and telephone calls). It is managed by a Senior Civil Servant, and there is close liaison with Ministers on a daily basis.
Regarding statins, as stated in my previous email the National Institute for Health and Clinical Effectiveness (NICE) published a Health Technology Appraisal (HTA)on statins in January 2006. CVD covers a range of conditions, including coronary heart disease and stroke. Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) is the single most common cause of death in the UK , as well as being responsible for a great deal of illness and poor quality of life.
Raised cholesterol is one of the major modifiable risk factors for CVD, and statins are the principal pharmacological treatment for lowering cholesterol. There have also been several major long term studies of the effectiveness of statins, so this was an important area for NICE to examine.
This HTA took account of all available evidence and concluded that it was effective to intervene with statin therapy in patients who scored a 20 per cent or greater ten-year risk of developing cardiovascular disease, regardless of the starting cholesterol.
NICE is currently working on a guideline on lipid control, due for publication in September 2007, which is also looking at the issue of risk assessment.
There is nothing more I can add regarding this matter.
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my response follows...
Thank you for your reply to my formal request to have this matter placed before the Minister for Public Health. I do appreciate the point, which you have made, about a senior civil servant managing the Customer Service Centre; which you have stated to me is an integral part of the Department of Health. There may well be daily liaison between the Minister and the Customer Services Department. I am sure that you will forgive me for re-iteratintg that my questions not only concern my own and the public health in a general way but the risk of very real harm to me and any other patients who are prescribed statins.
I have read all of the materials that you have referred to... and very much more besides, which was one of the original points that I had sought to make. If this medication is going to harm me personally (and a great deal of peer-reviewed evidence suggests that this is indeed the case) do you really think that I should await the pronouncement from NICE that will not be published until at least September 2007?
I have already indicated that there is a body of scientific and credible opinion that demonstrates that Framingham was more than a little flawed. If Framingham was used to underpin the HTA appraisal, which is a likely proposition because you have personally informed me that much of the UK statin policy is derived from Framingham, then those guidelines must be more than a little awry.
You have stated here, that there is nothing you can add to the matter, and I am acutely aware of that fact because that is precisely the issue which had prompted my formal request for this matter to be referred to the relevant Minister for Public Health.
I am not trying to score some frivolous point with you nor am I being needlessly vexatious for fun. As a healthcare professional, with a long and useful National Health Service career behind me, it is my considered opinion that it is an error to sweep this issue under the carpet, by ostensibly fobbing me off with whichever standard responses have been devised and provided by the Customer Service Department at the Department of Health.
This is not a difficult issue but for the sake of clarity, I will reiterate the problems I am having so that you can understand why I believe that this is not a matter that is amenable to a pre-prepared response from the department.
1. Statins are often damaging to the patient. The following URL is instructive insofar as recording the truly harrowing tales of patients and their families whiler undergoing various forms of statin therapies...
http://www.spacedoc.net/board/
2. The damage caused by statins is under-reported because the general case has been that statins are very beneficial. I commend the URLs to you that were included in my initial communication and I (respectfully) suggest that the material contained at those sites is both read and digested, so that it may inform future policy.
3. I have no wish to take statins, for even one day, given my concerns and the vast wealth of medical and anecdotal evidence before me
4. Financially rewarding GPs, who meet the current government targets for lower cholesterol levels, is encouraging GPs to conclude that statin therapy is safe... indeed the prescription of statins has evidently become a meme within many quarters of the medical profession.
5. Recent trials on phase 3 clinical trials of statin compounds, have caused many unexplained and unexpected deaths and the trials were halted. Where is the global concomitant note of caution to all prescribers of statin therapy?
6. To paraphrase the venerable Florence Nightingale, who insisted that "hospitals should do the sick no harm", this is not good enough... it is right that the health service (contributed to by me since I had started work) should actively be doing the patient some good. Florence Nightingale's imprecation was far too passive, in my own opinion, and required to be more active in seeking out what constituted good patient care. Bottom of that list would be failing to heed the signs seen in numerous patients and not listening to patients who can relate to the iatrogenic damage that follows statin prescriptions.
I need to be reassured that this particular set of issues has actually been passed to the Minister for Public Health so that I can be satisfied that the matter will receive urgent and appropriate executive attention. Accordingly, I am invoking the Freedom of Information Act 2000, including any subsequent amendments and corollaries.
I am now making a formal request to see all of the documentary evidence pertaining to my requests. The documentation should include all relevant internal e-mail messages, any records of internal telephone calls, any memoranda regarding the disposal of my questions and notes of conversations (about my requests) that have taken place between unnamed and various civil servants and Caroline Flint, the Minister for Public Health.