http://www.sundayherald.com/22204
It
is not only government doctors who do not wish to know. Any evidence of
long-term side effects would make it much more difficult for the vaccine
manufacturers to defend the class action being brought on behalf of more
than 1000 children whose parents believe them to have been seriously
damaged. Thus, even now, trials of possible new vaccines are conducted both
by industry and government doctors with follow-up of the children involved
for as little as three weeks. The
Medical Research Council group, set up to decide what research is needed
into the recent tenfold rise in autism rates, unsurprisingly decided that
no further research was needed into links between MMR and autism. Three
members of the group were doctors acting for the vaccine manufacturers in
the legal case. Doctors
may have conflicts of interest that alter the advice they give. This
problem has grown rapidly over the past 20 years with changes in the way
medical research is funded. There was a time when scientific research was
either pure or applied. Pure researchers just wanted to find new knowledge,
regardless of whether there was any immediate use for it. Applied
scientists looked for ways to use new knowledge for the greater good of
mankind. Most research was funded by government. Now,
the majority of medical research is funded by industry, and the driving
force has become the commercial interest of the sponsor. Dorothy Nelkin, a
leading American sociologist of science, recently said : 'Science is a big
business, a costly enterprise commonly financed by corporations and driven
by the logic of the market. Entrepreneurial values, economic interests, and
the promise of profits are shaping the scientific ethos.' Sometimes
the influence of profit is direct. There have been several examples of
researchers deliberately changing research results to favour a drug in
which they have a commercial interest. Usually the effect is more
insidious. A study of articles in medical journals reviewing the value of a
particular group of drugs showed that authors with a financial link to
manufacturers of the drugs were much more likely to support their use. In
most cases the financial link had not been declared. That is why two dozen
prominent scientists and ethicists wrote last week to more than 200 leading
medical and scientific journals demanding far more rigorous policies for
disclosing authors' financial interests. In
the current debate over MMR, it is insidious influence that is at work.
Many government advisers on the Committee on the Safety of Medicines and
the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation have financial links to
pharmaceutical and vaccine manufacturers. The latter would not dream of
telling the advisers what to say. Nevertheless there will be a clear
understanding that advisers who say things against the companies' interests
will find, for instance, that the funding for their research assistant will
dry up or they are no longer invited to give papers to conferences held in
exotic locations. That
would seem to explain why none have recommended using the present research
opportunity. Since so many parents are refusing MMR for their children but
are willing to have the single measles jab, it would be possible to set up
a large-scale, prospective comparison of MMR and measles jabs, with
long-term follow-up. It has never been done because previously it was
thought unethical. Yet it could provide really useful information to answer
many of the present uncertainties, and could now be done ethically. It
won't be done, of course, because it would upset too many vested interests.
But if we continue to allow government doctors and advisers to consider
only short-term commercial interests, history tells us that we are likely
to pay a much higher price in the long term. Dr
Richard Nicholson is the editor of the Bulletin Of Medical Ethics
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