by Alison Bass | Nov 23, 2009 | Uncategorized
We’ve got family coming in for Thanksgiving and I have much to do. So this week, I’d just like to point my faithful readers to three items of interest:1. Gary Schwitzer’s great blog, which goes a long way to explaining why there was such an unholy...
by Alison Bass | Nov 16, 2009 | Uncategorized
Talk about synergy. Just a few days ago, my health and science journalism class at Brandeis was discussing ethics in science, using as a template an old case example involving scientific fraud in the University of Michigan laboratory then headed by Dr. Francis...
by Alison Bass | Nov 9, 2009 | Uncategorized
In the days since the Fort Hood shooting, I have wondered whether the gunman, Major Nidal Malik Hasan, was taking antidepressants in the weeks or months before he sprayed a medical clinic with bullets, killing 13 people. I hesitated to raise that question since there...
by Alison Bass | Nov 2, 2009 | Uncategorized
Just in case you didn’t read the Saturday papers, let me call your attention to this article in The Boston Globe about the chickens coming home to roost for Amgen, the California biotech that makes Aranesp, an anti-anemia drug for people with cancer and kidney...
by Alison Bass | Oct 26, 2009 | Uncategorized
The recent murder suicide of an elderly couple in Newton, Massachusetts brought to mind a horrific story I heard while attending the ICSSP conference in Syracuse a few weeks ago. In 2006, David Crespi, a former banking executive with no criminal record or history of...
by Alison Bass | Oct 21, 2009 | Uncategorized
At the NASW annual conference this past weekend, I happened to sit next to a scientist who studies ethical violations in scientific papers. Over lunch, Harold (Skip) Garner, a professor of biochemistry and internal medicine at the Unviersity of Texas Southwestern...