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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 11663

Warning: This library includes all items relevant to health product marketing that we are aware of regardless of quality. Often we do not agree with all or part of the contents.

 

Publication type: Journal Article

Gornall J.
Hyperactivity in children: the Gillberg affair
BMJ 2007 Aug 25; 335:(7616):370
http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/short/335/7616/370?etoc


Abstract:

What drove members of a highly respected psychiatric research group to defy the Swedish courts and destroy 15 years’ worth of irreplaceable data? A decade after the Gillberg affair began, Jonathan Gornall examines the facts

Over one weekend in May 2004, three researchers in the University of Gothenburg’s department of child and adolescent psychiatry shredded tens of thousands of documents, destroying all data from a 15 year longitudinal study following 60 Swedish children with severe attention deficit disorders.

What became known as the Gillberg affair began in 1996, at a community summer party on the Swedish island of Resö. Among the guests were Leif Elinder, a paediatrician recently returned to Sweden after several years spent working abroad, and Christopher Gillberg, professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at Gothenburg University.

The men had known each other since childhood, when they had met on the island most summers. Professor Gillberg had since become a world expert in autism and attention deficit disorder and a leading proponent of deficits in attention, motor control, and perception (DAMP), a Nordic concept developed in the 1970s to describe a combination of . . .

Professional disagreement

Degrees of difference

Accusations of misconduct

An underlying motive?

Confidentiality

Destructive conclusion

Jgornall@mac.com

 

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There is no sin in being wrong. The sin is in our unwillingness to examine our own beliefs, and in believing that our authorities cannot be wrong. Far from creating cynics, such a story is likely to foster a healthy and creative skepticism, which is something quite different from cynicism.”
- Neil Postman in The End of Education