In the tabloid tradition of “If it bleeds, it leads,” The
New York Times ignored the lack of peer review and wasted no space on critical
analysis when it ran a May 3 article by Matt Richtel titled “Some E-Cigarettes
Deliver a Puff of Carcinogens.” (here).
Based on two unpublished studies, the Times reported that “the
high-power e-cigarettes known as tank systems produce formaldehyde, a known
carcinogen, along with the nicotine-laced vapor that their users inhale. The toxin is formed when liquid nicotine and
other e-cigarette ingredients are subjected to high temperatures... This
finding suggests that in certain conditions, [e-cigarettes] might expose their
users to the same or even higher levels of carcinogenic formaldehyde as tobacco
smoke.”
The Times also said the new research shows that when users
are “dripping” – placing drops of e-liquid directly onto an e-cig’s heating
element – “formaldehyde and related toxins ‘approach the concentration in
cigarettes.’”
The studies are the work of Roswell Park Cancer Institute
assistant professor Maciej L. Goniewicz, and Alan Shihadeh at Virginia
Commonwealth University and the American University in Beirut,
respectively. Goniewicz’s article will
reportedly appear in the May 15 edition of Nicotine
& Tobacco Research, while Shihadeh’s has not been accepted or
peer-reviewed anywhere (the Times says it “is being prepared for submission to
the same journal”).
The Times story represents a deeply troubling development:
the global publicizing of research before publication or even submission to a
medical journal.
This high-profile pre-release tactic has become commonplace
for anti-tobacco pronouncements from the CDC and other federal agencies. Media outlets give these biased stories wide
distribution free of critical analysis or balance.
Historically, release of findings prior to a journal’s
publication date was grounds for cancelling an article. In a recent post I suggested that peer review
of tobacco research is nearly nonexistent at some journals (here). It is further disappointing that
journals are active partners in the selective release of research findings to the
public.
3 comments:
Poor truth: "Science by Pressrelease" is a tool, which is often used by Tobaccocontrol.
I noted the striking parallels to the NYT's behavior in beating the drum for the Iraq war here: http://ep-ology.com/2014/04/27/fda-ecig-regulation-vs-iraq-war-parallels/
I think there is something more sinister afoot here than mere sloppy reporting. They are acting as uncritical transcriptionists for the most extreme prohibitionist militants, both in and out of government on their news page, while openly editorializing for prohibition also. This is pure political activism.
Hate to disagree with you, the author, but maybe you will agree with me.
Your title is "The New York Times Plays Patsy for Anti-Tobacco Voices"
It should be "The New York Times Plays Patsy for Pro- and Anti-Tobacco Voices"
BIG HEALTH is supporting tobacco smoking by scare mongering about e-cigs.
Do you agree?
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