Guest guest Posted April 26, 2001 Report Share Posted April 26, 2001 From: " ilena rose " <ilena@...> Sent: Thursday, April 26, 2001 3:54 AM Subject: Scientists Often Mum About Ties to Industry > http://www.nytimes.com/2001/04/25/health/25CONF.html?searchpv=site01 & pagewan ted=print> > > April 25, 2001 > > Scientists Often Mum About Ties to Industry > > By SHERYL GAY STOLBERG > > ASHINGTON, April 24 -- Scientists who report research findings are > expected to divulge any financial ties that might influence their work. > But often they do not, according to the first comprehensive analysis of > disclosure policies in science and medical journals. > > In reviewing 61,134 scholarly articles published in 181 academic journals > in 1997, researchers at Tufts University and the University of California > at Los Angeles found that just one-half of 1 percent detailed personal > financial interests, including consulting arrangements, honorariums, > expert witness fees, company equity and stock, and patents. All of those > few disclosures appeared in just a third of the 181 journals. > > It is possible, of course, that scientists have few conflicts to report. > But experts say previous studies have shown that as many as half of all > academic researchers consult with industry, and roughly 8 percent have > stakes in biomedical companies related to their research. > > So the more likely explanation, said Dr. Sheldon Krimsky, a professor of > urban and environmental policy at Tufts and the study's lead author, is > that journal editors " are not forceful enough " in requiring disclosure, > " or there is widespread disobedience " of their rules. > > Dr. Krimsky's study appears in the April issue of Science and Engineering > Ethics, a journal that was not part of his survey. > > It comes at a time of increasing concern about the effects of > commercialization of science. And the findings are not surprising, said > Dr. Blumenthal, director of the Institute for Health Policy, a > research center at Massachusetts General Hospital. > > Dr. Blumenthal, who studies the ties between academia and industry, said > that scientists who failed to report conflicts generally " believe that > they are people of integrity, and they feel they can separate their work > from their financial interests. " > > But research suggests otherwise, Dr. Blumenthal said. Studies have found > that scientists with financial ties to the companies whose products they > study are more likely to write favorably about those products. > > The issue of financial disclosure has been in the news of late; last year, > the editors of The New England Journal of Medicine apologized to readers > for violating their own conflict-of-interest policies by publishing > reviews of the medical literature on drug therapies despite the reviewers' > financial relationships with the companies marketing the drugs. > > Dr. M. Drazen, The Journal's editor in chief, said that persuading > scientists to divulge personal financial data was not easy. " We have to > work at it, " he said. When researchers ignore inquiries about conflicts, > he said, many journals, including his own, assume none exist. > > Dr. Drazen said editors of journals around the world would meet in May and > discuss whether researchers should be required to submit either a > disclosure of conflict or what he called an " active negative disclosure, " > -- a declaration that the researcher is free of financial conflict. > > > Copyright 2001 The New York Times Company | Privacy Information > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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