The influential journal Science
recently posted on its website an article (here)
on the Foundation for a Smoke-Free World, an organization funded by a pledge of
almost $1 billion from Philip Morris International. The Foundation supports tobacco harm reduction
research with a stated goal of “end[ing] the production and use of combustible
cigarettes and help[ing] smokers switch to less dangerous alternatives.” Asking, should scientists take the funding,
the article clearly leans toward “no”.
The only affirmative comments included in the piece are from
the Foundation’s director and me, with my response truncated by the author to
this: “But public funding to help settle those questions is in short supply,
says Brad Rodu, a harm reduction advocate at the University of Louisville in
Kentucky who for years has relied on tobacco money.”
As I have written, government funding, predominantly from
the National Institutes of Health, keeps academic research aligned with a vision
of a tobacco-free society (here). NIH’s opposition to tobacco harm reduction
dates back to the mid-1990s, as seen in the agency’s efforts to undermine my research
and reputation (detailed in Jacob Sullum’s book, For Your Own Good, here).
The Science writer
casts me as “a harm reduction advocate…who for years has relied on tobacco
money,” despite my record of 65 published professional articles (available here,
with PubMed links) and 24 years of scientific endeavor, 19 of which were supported
by unrestricted grants from tobacco companies to, and administered by, two
universities.
Elsewhere in the story, an individual with half as many
published articles is respectfully described as a “tobacco control researcher” as
he terms the Foundation a “scam”.
I support academic freedom, including the right to use
research funding from any lawful source, accompanied by total transparency and
full disclosure. Research ought to be
judged on its merits, using objective standards of quality and accuracy.
The Foundation director is, regrettably, prescient in
anticipating “harassment of grantees and staff” and “ad hominem attacks”. Such behavior is, as he notes, unacceptable.
2 comments:
Im sorry - but I think you may have been kept out of the loop here
Only those who have directly or indirectly been funded by pharma or medical can be qualified as 'real' tobacco harm researchers/ experts.
Please understand that tobacco and nicotine THR (regardless of benefits direct and otherwise) is the new devils lettuce because we/ medical/ pharma dont control the now multi billion dollar market and many of us would stand to lose our prominent positions or jobs if we did not continue to demonize the market which we did not control.
The fact that nicotine and other related products for vaping, snus and unrelated medical products comes from tobacco plants making all things in the THR argument a case of apples and oranges and has no bearing on our decision on how we now push to treat (lie about) the issue of THR and its proponents.
We thank you for your understanding -
Ad hominem attacks, and the failure to deal with facts, is the sure mark of a charlatan and tool.
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