http://www.mercola.com/2002/jan/26/research.htm
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Special
Interests Undermine Objectivity of Scientific Research
Objective scientific research, often used
as the basis for policy decisions, is increasingly under attack by vested
interests attempting to control the outcome or impact of research. As government agencies, academic centers,
and researchers affiliated with them provide an increasing share of the
science base for policy decisions, they are also subject to efforts to
politicize or silence objective scientific research. Such
actions increasingly use sophisticated and complex strategies that put
evidence-based policy making at risk. A wide array of vested interests-those
who, for whatever reason, are committed to a predetermined outcome
independent of the evidence-may drive the undermining of sound science to
forestall the policy implications that would necessarily follow. These interests, which are often financial
but may also be emotional, ideologic, and political, may be acting alone or
in combination. Although economic interest is a common motivation and may
drive both corporations and individuals (e.g., lawyers, physicians),
emotional interests have played an increasing role in undermining sound
science to achieve their desired ends (as in the case of victims' groups). The role of corporate interests has been
best reported, at least in part because of the significant economic resources
corporations can bring to bear to influence policy outcomes. This trend of meddling with science to
achieve predetermined outcomes has serious implications for researchers at
academic institutions and government agencies as well as for the public at
large. We would like to think that the science used to make decisions that
affect all of our lives is pure - unfortunately, that is increasingly not the
case. Although growing more sophisticated and
complex, attacks on science are not new. To save his life, Galileo was forced
to publicly renounce his belief that the sun, not the earth, was the center
of the universe. Today, a variety of tactics including
economic manipulation, delay, hidden identities and harassment are used to
undermine sound science to achieve a desired end. An example would be the National Cancer
Institute consensus panel concluded that the science was inadequate to
support mammography for routine screening for breast cancer in women aged
40-49 years. Yet, in response to external pressure from
a variety of vested interest groups with financial and emotional commitments
to screening, the science was revisited and repackaged, resulting in the
recommendation that women in their 40s be screened every one to two years. The authors note that between 1965 and
1995 the proportion of federal funding of health research and development
dropped by almost half, to 34 percent, while industry's financial support
increased more than two-fold to 52 percent of the total $35.8 billion
expended. Moreover, nearly 12 percent ($1.5
billion) of research funds to academic institutions now come from the
corporate sector. There are many types of vested interests -
financial, emotional, ideological or political - in addition to corporate
interests. But corporations and the significant economic resources they can
use to influence policy outcomes have been the most thoroughly documented. The authors suggest that to ensure the
appropriate use of scientific evidence and the protection of the scientists
who provide it, institutions and individuals must give deferential response
to honest scientific challenges versus those from evident vested interests,
build and diversify partnerships, assure the transparency of funding sources,
agree on the rules for publications, and distinguish the point where science
ends and policy begins. American Journal of
Public Health, January 2002 92: 14-18 DR. MERCOLA'S
COMMENT: It is wonderful to see that the head of
the department of public health at the University of California at Los
Angeles is providing academic support for the concepts we have been promoting
for some time now. You can't trust the media or many of
the studies that are done as they are paid for by industry. This is particularly true of the
incredibly powerful drug industry. One of the reasons I write this
newsletter is to provide you, the reader, with the truth so you can weed
through much of the nonsense that the media throws at you. I know that it is difficult to do and
that is one of the main reasons for the newsletter. This newsletter will help
explain the details of how the media deceives you through the manipulation of
PR by the large corporations who do not have your best interest at heart. My goal is to change the entire system.
The way that will be done is through the Internet, which is the world's
cheapest printing press. By passing this newsletter on to as many of your
friends and relatives as possible along with a strong endorsement to
subscribe, you will play a major role in helping to lift the veil of deceit
that these corporations try to hide the truth with. We can change the traditional paradigm
and in the process save hundreds of thousands of people from premature death
and disability. Related
Articles: How the Media
Deceives You About Health Issues The Doors Of
Perception: Why Americans Will Believe Almost Anything |
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