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http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030715/03

 

Science in conflict

 

Symposium explores conflicts of interest and the extent of industry influence on

scientific findings | By Eugene Russo

 

 

Scientists and industry watchdogs gathered in Washington, D.C. last week to

explore egregious cases of industry-led manipulation and distortion of

scientific research—and to suggest remedies. The 1-day symposium, held by the

Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), is part of a CSPI project

called Integrity in Science.

 

Project director Virginia Sharpe said that the conference was intended to help

CSPI form an action plan for lobbying and advocacy strategies to prevent

manipulation and suppression of scientific data, the harassment of scientists

reporting potentially industry-damning results, and the raising of evidentiary

standards to unreasonable levels. The group also hopes to encourage better

conflict of interest policies at journals and to improve disclosure policies and

achieve better balance in National Academy of Science and science advisory

panels.

 

" We do not contend that industry-sponsored research is always bad or that

companies should be prohibited from providing input to government agencies, "

CSPI Executive Director Michael Jacobson told attendees. " Rather, our aim is to

characterize some of the problems that arise when industry influences science

and science policy and to identify ways of minimizing those problems. "

 

Sharpe told The Scientist that the CSPI, a longtime advocate of comprehensive

nutrition labels on foods, decided to hold the symposium after investigating the

food industry's hiring of scientists.

 

Speakers cited several other examples of industry-inspired deception—including

the exploits of the tobacco industry, of Exxon corporation following the Exxon

Valdez oil spill, of the food industry, the asbestos industry, and the

concentrated animal operation feed industries (CAFOs) in states such as North

Carolina, where lagoons of animal waste pollute the air and water.

 

According to the speakers, several industries have made so-called " junk

science " —the publication of their own self-serving research results—common

practice. Also common are suppressing or criticizing research that does not

support their position and disseminating data or their own risk interpretations

directly to the lay press and policy makers.

 

Many industries have detailed plans in place to challenge scientific findings as

soon as regulations appear that could threaten their bottom line, said David

Michaels, a research professor of occupational and health services at George

Washington University and a former US assistant secretary of energy for

environment, safety, and health.

 

The tobacco industry originated the " junk science " movement, Michaels noted.

Using the tobacco industry's own documents, Lisa Bero, a professor of clinical

pharmacy at the University of California, San Francisco, described the ways in

which tobacco companies have intentionally manufactured doubt and controversy

via their own research findings in the hope of downplaying scientific evidence

that illustrates the health risks associated with cigarette smoking and

second-hand smoke.

 

Predating the tobacco industry, the lead industry used similar tactics to foster

doubt, including targeted advertising campaigns, according to Columbia

University history professor David Rosner, Gerald Markowitz of the John Jay

College of Criminal Justice, and Herbert Needleman, a professor of child

psychiatry and pediatrics. The speakers described how the lead industry led a

campaign to downplay the dangers and effects of lead paint in children and to

discredit associated research and researchers—in particular, Needleman himself.

At the symposium, Needleman received CSPI's inaugural Award for Integrity in

Science for his " pioneering and courageous contributions to the understanding

and prevention of childhood lead poisoning. "

 

JoAnn Burkholder, a professor of aquatic biology at North Carolina State

University, and Steven Wing, an associate professor of epidemiology at

University of North Carolina, described how CAFOs have avoided, for the most

part, strict legislation that would require cleanup of huge animal waste

deposits, which have been scientifically demonstrated to be major threats to air

and soil quality in some states. Wing emphasized that those most affected by

such pollution are poor persons unlikely to have a voice in government.

 

Jeffrey Short, chief chemist for the National Marine Fisheries Service

investigation of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, described a series of attacks on

government science by Exxon. According to Short, Exxon manipulated data about

the extent of the spill to support its claim that much of the seafloor near

Alaska was already contaminated by natural oil seeps. Short also cited glaring

abuses of scientific peer review, the manipulation of scientific meeting

agendas, and abuses of the Freedom of Information Act, which Exxon has used to

make very broad requests—including requests for data associated with research

still in progress—that slowed studies and interfered with their publication. " It

has, in effect, reduced us to being field technicians for Exxon, " said Short,

who took a leave from his job in order to speak out on the subject.

 

Jennifer Sass, a senior scientist at the National Resources Defense Council,

argued that many methodologies for screening and detecting toxic chemical agents

are so complex and novel that industries have been able to produce data on the

rigor of these models without any outside oversight. As a result, said Sass,

polluting industries have weakened regulatory standards based on specious data.

She recommended, among other things, that a broader array of tests routinely be

employed to include effects on in utero exposures, juvenile animals, both sexes,

and central nervous system tissues.

 

Most speakers also proposed remedies to the problems they described. These

included more attention from scientific societies to conflict of science

prevention and to the issue of industry pressure; full disclosure from

scientists of affiliations with industry, trade associations, unions, and public

interest groups; disclosure of the identity of reviewers of industry-sponsored

research; further disclosure of internal industry documents to better understand

strategies the industries use to influence research study design and conduct;

ensuring that all scientists make their data available for public scrutiny;

enforcement by journals of standards of scientific misconduct; ombudsmen at

universities to help professors pressured by industry; special recognition for

scientists who reveal significant research impacts on industry; and legislation

to prohibit industries from controlling the publication of findings by

nonindustry scientists.

 

Tufts University professor of urban and environmental planning Sheldon Krimsky

suggested that universities reexamine the very principles on which they're

founded and find ways of protecting those principles from compromises made for

the sake of amassing larger budgets. Krimsky, who has a book due out this

August—titled Science in the Private Interest: Has the Lure of Profits Corrupted

Biomedical Research?—worries that industry involvement in scientific research

threatens the very notion of scientific objectivity.

Links for this article

CSPI Conference on Conflicted Science: Corporate Influence on Scientific

Research and Science-Based Policy, July 11, 2003, Washington, D.C.

http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/conflictedscience_conf.html

 

Integrity in Science: A Center for Science in the Public Interest Project

http://www.cspinet.org/integrity/index.html

 

P. Brickley, " Attack on panel politics, " The Scientist, March 12, 2003.

http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20030312/01/

 

A. Barnett, M. Townsend, " Anger at advisers' biotech links, " The Guardian, July

13, 2003.

http://education.guardian.co.uk/politics/story/0,6903,997205,00 .html

 

P. Moore, " Damned if they do, broke if they don't, " The Scientist, November 11,

2002.

http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20021111/03/

 

 

 

 

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