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The following was published by Dr.
Joseph Mercola on October 15, 2011!
I completely agree with him!
Peer-reviewed research published in
medical journals gets the golden
star of approval in the media, yet
many, if not most, of the findings
are incredibly misleading. One of
the best exposé's into this muddled
system came from none other than Dr.
Marcia Angell, who was the
former editor-in-chief of the New
England Journal of Medicine (NEJM).
In her book
The Truth about Drug Companies: How
They Deceive Us and What to Do About
It, she exposed many examples of
why medical studies often cannot be
trusted, and said flat out:
"Trials can be rigged in a dozen
ways, and it happens all the time."
For instance, in 2009 Dr. Scott
Reuben, who was a well-respected,
prominent anesthesiologist, former
chief of acute pain of the Baystate
Medical Center, Springfield, Mass.
and a former professor at Tufts
University's medical school,
allegedly fabricated the data for
21 studies!
Dr. Reuben succeeded in getting
numerous studies published, and
those studies were accepted as fact
and swayed the prescribing habits of
doctors. It was only due to a
routine audit raising a few red
flags that a larger investigation
was later launched.
So how did those false studies, or
any studies for that matter, become
worthy of being published? Part of
the problem may be the peer-review
process itself, as this puts
researchers in charge of policing
other researchers' results, and most
do not want to insult a fellow
researcher's work with negative
comments.
As written in
Gaia Health:
"It's all about money. Get published
in a major medical journal and your
future is made. Most peer reviewers
are doing their own studies. That's
what makes them peers. They want to
be able to publish. Therefore, they
are not particularly inclined to
make more than perfunctory negative
comments. Obviously, they don't want
to alienate the authors of papers,
since they either are or hope to
become published themselves.
Peer review is a farce. The only
kind of review that makes real sense
is professional independent
reviewers. Yet, for decades we've
had peer review trotted out as the
be-all and end-all in determining
the legitimacy of papers. It's been
unquestioned, while a little
examination of the concept
demonstrates that it's nearly
certain to result in fraudulent work
being passed as good science."
It's almost impossible to find out
what happens in the vetting process,
as peer reviewers are unpaid,
anonymous and unaccountable. And
although the system is based on the
best of intentions, it lacks
consistent standards and the
expertise of the reviewers can vary
widely from journal to journal.
Given that cancer research is such a
lucrative business right now -- the
National Cancer Institute, which
gave the grant money to support Dr.
Sheng Wang's fabricated research,
had a $5.1 billion budget for fiscal
year 2010 -- the stakes are
exceptionally high. So it stands to
reason that it may be subject to
even more fraud and manipulation
than less lucrative research
prospects.
As
The Economist reported, there
were more new cancer drugs in
development in 2010 than any other
therapeutic area. Drug makers are
well aware that a blockbuster cancer
drug could easily earn them profits
in the
billions, even if the
drug is only borderline effective.
It is abundantly clear that profit
is a primary motive of these
companies so it should not be a
surprise that they have moved in
this direction, and this is where
the abundance of research is focused
as well.
Why You Might Want
to Think Twice Before Donating to
Anti-Cancer Charities
A lot of people put their faith in
charity organizations like the
American Cancer Society (ACS),
dutifully donating money to help in
the "war on cancer." But in the
report titled
American Cancer Society—More
Interested In Accumulating Wealth
Than Saving Lives,
Dr. Samuel S.
Epstein, chairman of the Cancer
Prevention Coalition, plainly
lays to bare the many conflicts of
interest that hamper the
effectiveness of this organization.
For example, the ACS has close
financial ties to both makers of
mammography equipment and cancer
drugs. But that's just for starters.
Other conflicts of interest include
ties to, and financial support from,
the pesticide-, petrochemical-,
biotech-, cosmetics-, and junk food
industries—the very industries whose
products are the primary
contributors to cancer!
The ACS, along with the National
Cancer Institute, virtually
exclusively focus on cancer research
and the diagnosis and chemical
treatment of cancer. Preventive
strategies, such as avoiding
chemical exposures, receive
virtually no consideration at all.
"Giant corporations, which profited
handsomely while they polluted air,
water, the workplace, and food with
a wide range of carcinogens, remain
greatly comforted by the silence of
the ACS. This silence reflected a
complex of mindsets fixated on
diagnosis, treatment, and basic
genetic research, together with
ignorance, indifference, and even
hostility to prevention. Not
surprisingly, the incidence of
cancer over past decades has
escalated, approximately parallel to
its increased funding,"
Dr. Epstein writes.
Many also do not realize that when
you donate money to the American
Cancer Society, the majority of it
may never go further than the bank
accounts of its numerous well-paid
executives.
Meanwhile, global cancer rates have
doubled in the last
three decades, and their "war on
cancer" strategy completely ignores,
and oftentimes denies, the
obvious links between
cancer and toxic exposures through
pesticide-laden foods, toxic
personal care products,
cancer-causing medical treatments
and drugs, and industrial pollution.
We CAN turn this trend around, but
to do so the medical and research
communities must stop focusing on
drug treatments and overlooking the
methods that can actually have a
significant impact on
preventing this disease. |