Cigarette company involved in research wrongdoing
A public-health article
published online by The Lancet suggests that Philip Morris, one of
the world’s leading tobacco manufacturers, was covertly involved in
scientific research into the health effects of tobacco 30 years ago, and
conducted research into the dangers of passive smoking, which do not appear
to have been published.
Martin McKee (London
school of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine), and colleagues Pascal Diethelm and
Jean-Charles Rielle from Switzerland highlight how Phillip Morris used a
German-based research facility to do research into the health effects of
tobacco smoke from the early 1970s onward. Dr. McKee explains: “The tobacco
industry maintained, for many years, that it was unaware of research about
the toxic effects of smoking.
By the 1970s, however,
the industry decided that it needed this information but they were unwilling
to seek it in a way that was open to public scrutiny. By means of material
from internal industry documents it can be revealed that one company, Philip
Morris, acquired a research facility in Germany and created a complex
mechanism seeking to ensure that the work done in the facility could not be
linked to Philip Morris. Arrangements were made to conceal this process, not
only from the wider public, but also from many within Philip Morris,
although some senior executives did know.”
The article also
highlights how the published research appears to reflect the interests of
the tobacco industry. “The scientists involved appear to have published only
a small amount of their research,” Prof. McKee adds, “and what was
published appears to differ considerably from what was not. In particular,
the unpublished reports provided evidence that second-hand smoke is even
more harmful than mainstream smoke, a finding of particular relevance given
the industry’s continuing denial of the harmful effects of passive smoking.
By contrast, much of its published work comprises papers that seek to cast
doubt on methods used to assess the effects of passive smoking.”
Prof. McKee concludes:
“We believe that it is essential that those involved in reviewing evidence
on smoking and health should be aware of what appears to be the selective
nature of what is eventually published by some scientists with links to the
industry, and the evidence that sometimes mechanisms appear to have been
used to disguise these links. Any research in this field must involve full
disclosure of competing interests and any involvement of the tobacco
industry in the instigation, design, analysis or interpretation of findings.
Specifically, Philip Morris should be required to explain why it took the
steps documented here to maintain what appears to have been considerable
secrecy about its role in research on the effects of sidestream (passive)
smoke and consequently its knowledge of its effects, effects that appear at
odds with its public statements.”
Lancet
Editor Richard Horton comments: “Given the continuing debate about the way
governments should respond to calls for a ban on smoking in public places,
we have published this work early online to inform that discussion as a
matter of urgency. Pascal Diethelm and his colleagues reveal attempts by one
company – Philip Morris – to conceal their links to a research centre in
Germany studying the health effects of smoking. The research conducted in
that facility appears to have been selectively reported in order to
favourably shape public impressions about the safety of passive smoking.”
Dr. Horton adds: “As
the UK government launches its white paper on public health, ministers must
be alert to the fact that parts of the tobacco industry have apparently
attempted to hide important research that could and should influence
government policy. It is essential not only that ministers are aware of this
apparent strategy of concealment, but also that they formulate a
public-health response to protect people from the known damaging effects of
environmental tobacco smoke. Not to do so would be a capitulation to an
industry that seems to have manipulated evidence which might undermine their
ability to profit from an addictive drug – one that continues to cause
extreme human suffering.”
SOURCE:
“The whole truth and nothing but the truth? The research that Philip Morris
did not want you to see,” by Pascal A Diethelm, Jean-Charles Rielle, Martin
McKee, The Lancet, Vol 364, No 9447, 13 Nov 2004
(www.thelancet.com).