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Healthy Skepticism Library item: 17462

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: news

Advisory panel to review Emory ethics policies
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 2008 Nov 3
http://www.ajc.com/services/content/metro/dekalb/stories/2008/11/03/emory_university_ethics.html?cxtype=rss&cxsvc=7&cxcat=13


Full text:

An advisory commission headed by a nationally known ethicist will review Emory University’s policies and practices regarding potential conflicts of interest.

The commission will report to university president James Wagner, who appointed the President’s Advisory Commission on Research Integrity and Professional Conflict Management.

Ethicist Paul Root Wolpe, new director of Emory’s Center for Ethics, will be the group’s chairman. Faculty from the schools of medicine, business and law will be among commission members.

Creation of the commission comes during an internal investigation into the financial ties of a top university psychiatrist, Dr. Charles Nemeroff.

Nemeroff has been a prime target of a U.S. Senate Finance Committee investigation into whether drug company money paid to doctors and academics compromises medical research and scholarship.

 

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Far too large a section of the treatment of disease is to-day controlled by the big manufacturing pharmacists, who have enslaved us in a plausible pseudo-science...
The blind faith which some men have in medicines illustrates too often the greatest of all human capacities - the capacity for self deception...
Some one will say, Is this all your science has to tell us? Is this the outcome of decades of good clinical work, of patient study of the disease, of anxious trial in such good faith of so many drugs? Give us back the childlike trust of the fathers in antimony and in the lancet rather than this cold nihilism. Not at all! Let us accept the truth, however unpleasant it may be, and with the death rate staring us in the face, let us not be deceived with vain fancies...
we need a stern, iconoclastic spirit which leads, not to nihilism, but to an active skepticism - not the passive skepticism, born of despair, but the active skepticism born of a knowledge that recognizes its limitations and knows full well that only in this attitude of mind can true progress be made.
- William Osler 1909