Research -
About
research/science, research in general/research conduct
March 1-7, 2004
►March 5, 2004 -
Scientist says no study yet proving GMO safety -
www.sunstar.com.ph - "Traavik,
who is based at the University of Tromso in Norway, admitted that there are not
enough studies on the safety of GMOs, even from independent scientists, as the
studies entail huge costs...He said the United States-based Monsanto Company,
producer of the Bt corn, have presented supposed findings on the safety of their
products, but he pointed out that the findings were 'not scientifically
substantiated'...'If you look at their (study) design, they were more on the
productional elements. There were no studies on what happened to the bodies of
the scientists exposed to them,' he said."
►March 3, 2004 -
Estrogen Study
Stopped Early Because of Slight Stroke Risk (requires registration or
subscription) - The New York Times - "A large federal study of estrogen therapy
in postmenopausal women has been stopped a year ahead of schedule because the
estrogen increased the risk of stroke and offered no protection against heart
disease, the government announced yesterday...The study included only women
taking estrogen alone, not those who take combined hormones. An earlier study,
halted abruptly in 2002 after the researchers found an increased risk of breast
cancer, involved only women taking the combined hormones estrogen and
progestin...But health officials also noted that the increased risk was small,
estimated at about eight extra strokes per year for every 10,000 women taking
estrogen."
►February 19, 2004 - Report
Urges Higher Ethics in Human Toxicity Studies (requires registration) -
Reuters Health via Medscape - "A government-sponsored expert panel recommended
Thursday that federal regulators closely scrutinize controversial experiments in
which humans are intentionally exposed to toxic chemicals...The panel urged the
agency to restrict human toxicity research to studies that are "necessary and
scientifically valid" and to only use human volunteers in cases where animal
testing is uninformative or unavailable. Human studies should also only be
performed when the potential benefits to society outweigh the potential risk to
research subjects, the report said."
►February 27, 2004 -
Scientists doubt animal research - Many animal
experiments may be of little benefit to treating human disease, according to
experts. - BBC
►February 25, 2004 - Hopkins
group had pattern of errors - Drug mix-ups, unqualified staff led to broader
probe; Child died after home care lapse - The Baltimore Sun
►February 13, 2004 - Fraud
spurs Cell paper retraction - Postdoc fabricated data, leaving his career in
tatters and embarrassing his boss - The Scientist via BioMed Central
February 16-22, 2004
none
selected this week
February 9-15, 2004
none
selected this week
January 26 - February 8, 2004 (2 weeks combined
due to illness)
►February 7, 2004 - Adventist
was human guinea pig for military during Vietnam War - Sarasota
Herald-Tribune - "Ken Cobb was drafted into the Army during the height of
the Vietnam War. Instead of fighting in the jungles of Vietnam, the Seventh-day
Adventist member volunteered as a human guinea pig in a top-secret biological
weapons program...He was one of a select group of soldiers who volunteered from
1954 to 1973 to expose themselves to deadly viruses and bacteria as human guinea
pigs. The Army used the soldiers to test vaccines and equipment against
biological weapons and diseases and to develop treatments for these diseases.
All of the volunteers were members of the Seventh-day Adventist Church."
►February
5, 2004 -
Autism: The doubts: B.C. Doctors not convinced - The Province - "'Much of
the research that looks for harms from vaccines, at some point, you come back to
the fact that the researcher may have a bias against vaccines and this work gets
seized upon by people who clearly have a bias against vaccines,' Kendall said."
Comment: Well, gee, I wonder why this "expert"
never seemed to have a problem before with studies alleging to vindicate
vaccines that not only were conducted by pro-vaccine researchers, but paid for
or otherwise influenced by vaccine manufacturers.
►January 21, 2004 -
Experts demand 'cowboy cloners' ban - Maverick scientists attempting to
clone humans should be outlawed across the world, a leading expert has said. -
BBC
►January 23, 2004 - Trials
'do not benefit patients' - There is little proof that taking part in
clinical trials alone is enough to improve outcomes for cancer patients,
research has found. - BBC
►January 15, 2004 -
Science
losing its appeal - A trend away from science among
students leaves French academics worried - The Scientist
January 12-18, 2004
►January 16, 2004 - Doctors
disagree over boy's illness - North Lake Tahoe Bonanza - "Controversy
and disagreement are as endemic in the medical field as in any other. One recent
example is the recent diagnosis of Incline Elementary School fourth-grader
Nathan Shuey."
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information, data, and material contained, presented, or provided here is for
general information purposes only and is not to be construed as reflecting the
knowledge or opinions of the publisher, and is not to be construed or intended
as providing medical or legal advice. The decision whether or not to vaccinate
is an important and complex issue and should be made by you, and you alone, in
consultation with your health care provider.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"