Lawsuits have an intimidating effect on an already difficult enterprise.
We have a dispiriting shortage of high-quality health research for many reasons, including the fact that it’s expensive, difficult and time-intensive. But one reason is more insidious: Sometimes groups seek to intimidate and threaten scientists, scaring them off promising work.
We struggled for a while to categorise this one, not least because it’s about research that’s stopped before it is started so a research ethics committee won’t see it. But it’s about a societal issue and about commonsense ethics. Big issues that effect real people that vested interests use the courts to keep from coming to light.
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I often complain about a lack of solid evidence on guns’ relationship to public health. There’s a reason for that deficiency. In the 1990s, when health services researchers produced work on the dangers posed by firearms, those who disagreed with the results tried to have the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control shut down. They failed, but getting such work funded became nearly impossible after that…