|
Today's Washington Post editorial, Missing Drug Data, is divorced
from reality. It is written by someone who clearly doesn't understand
the safety issues involved when doctors are kept ignorant of the risks
of prescribing drugs that expose patients to severe adverse effects.
Nor does the editor appear to understand clinical trials are the basis
for the pharmaceutical industry's multi-billion dollar business. The
editorial would have us believe that "Forcing companies to publish results
of all trials, as opposed to the fact of their existence...might backfire
and wind up discouraging companies from conducting any trials at all."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A16224-2004Jun29.html
Below is a letter to the editor by Dr. John Nobel, AHRP board member,
which is posted on the Post's online forum: http://forums.washingtonpost.com/wpeditorials/messages/?msg=3582.1
To the Editor:
Today's (6/30/04) editorial, "Missing Drug Data," misses the point
and argues with the pharmaceutical industry and its allies in the Congress,
the NIH and the FDA that data can be selectively reported to satisfy
commercial interests. This is a blatant attack on Karl Popper's falsifiability
principle on which empirical science depends to make progress. One needs
all the data in order to verify the results of clinical or any other
kind of research. Most academics and pundits know that any case can
be made if allowed to manipulate the data and assumptions. The AMA,
the medical journal editors, and Eliot Spitzer, all deserve applause
from the Washington Post editor-not quibbling about the possible damage
that somehow, somewhere might result from strict embrace of the principles
and practice of scientific inquiry. It's all about transparency.
John H. Noble, Jr.
Endowed Professor for Social Justice
National Catholic School of Social Service
The Catholic University of America
Washington, DC 20064
Contact: Vera Hassner Sharav
Tel: 212-595-8974
|