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The Lancet ' s editor-in-chief Richard Horton described it as "utterly false" and said that the journal had been deceived. [ 49 ] The Hansard text for 16 March 2010 reported [ 74 ] Lord McColl asking the Government whether it had plans to recover legal aid money paid to the experts in connection with the measles, mumps and rubella/measles and ...
A Lancet review on Handling of Scientific Misconduct in Scandinavian countries gave examples of policy definitions. In Denmark, scientific misconduct is defined as "intention[al] negligence leading to fabrication of the scientific message or a false credit or emphasis given to a scientist", and in Sweden as "intention[al] distortion of the ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 29 November 2024. "MMR vaccine fraud" redirects here. For more about the The Lancet article that was published in 1998, see Lancet MMR autism fraud. False claims of a link between the MMR vaccine and autism Part of a series on Alternative medicine General information Alternative medicine History ...
The now-retracted study included 36 patients with COVID-19, including 20 who were said to have been treated with hydroxychloroquine and azithromycin, an antibiotic.
On 2 February 2010, The Lancet formally retracted Wakefield's 1998 paper. [94] [95] [96] The retraction states: "The claims in the original paper that children were 'consecutively referred' and that investigations were 'approved' by the local ethics committee have been proven to be false." [18]
On 3 June 2020, The Lancet and the NEJM released online "expressions of concern" about the published studies, [30] [31] and on 4 June the Lancet paper was retracted by Mehra, Ruschitzka, and Amit Patel, all authors except Desai. In their retraction, the three wrote Surgisphere had not transferred "the full dataset, client contracts, and the ...
CNN political analyst Julian Zelizer points to Donald Trump’s political survival and ponders the question of why scandals aren’t what they used to be. Opinion: Trump’s hush money case and ...
Brian Deer is a British investigative journalist, best known for inquiries into the drug industry, medicine, and social issues for The Sunday Times.Deer's investigative nonfiction book The Doctor Who Fooled the World, an exposé on disgraced former doctor Andrew Wakefield and the 1998 Lancet MMR autism fraud, was published in September 2020 by Johns Hopkins University Press.