I would like to thank Steve for allowing me to publish his work. EPA has made it clear publically they intend to fulfill the mandate outlined in the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act regarding endocrine disruption. This article is the next installment in a continuing series I will be posting to expose the fraud behind this. RK
A scientific
study that spawned a federal law requiring the testing of chemicals for their
potential to interfere with hormonal processes has been found to be the product
of scientific misconduct.
The federal
Office of Research Integrity just ruled that Steven F. Arnold, a former
researcher at the Tulane University Center for Bioenvironmental Research,
"committed scientific misconduct by intentionally falsifying the research
results published in the journal Science and by providing falsified and
fabricated materials to investigating officials." Arnold lied and then
covered up.
The ORI also
found that, "there is no original data or other corroborating evidence to
support the research results and conclusions reported in the Science
paper as a whole."
The disturbing
tale began in 1996 with the publication of the book Our Stolen Future: Are We Threatening Our Fertility,
Intelligence and Survival? —
A Scientific Detective Story. The book was a compendium of
loosely told anecdotes that attempted to implicate chemicals in the environment
and our food — such as PCBs, pesticides and plastics — as the cause of diseases
ranging from cancer to infertility to attention deficit disorder.
The authors of Our Stolen Future speculated
that these chemicals — so-called "environmental estrogens" or
"endocrine disrupters" — disrupted normal hormonal processes, even at
low exposure levels generally accepted as safe.
Although Our Stolen Future initially
received a great deal of media attention, it soon died out amid much
criticism from many respected scientists. But just when the fury faded, Arnold
and his Tulane gang published their study in June 1996, claiming that
combinations of pesticides and PCBs were up to 1,000 times more potent as
endocrine disrupters than the individual chemicals alone.
"The new
study is the strongest evidence to date that combinations of estrogenic
chemicals may be potent enough to significantly increase the risk of breast
cancer, prostate cancer, birth defects and other major health concerns, "
said then-EPA chief Carol Browner.
"I was
astounded by the findings," said then-EPA pesticide chief Lynn Goldman.
"I just can't remember a time where I've seen data so persuasive … The
results are very clean looking."
The study
received a great deal of publicity that stampeded Congress into passing a bill
in July 1996, signed into law by President Clinton, requiring the EPA to
develop a program for screening thousands of chemicals for their ability to act
as endocrine disrupters.
The EPA's
Endocrine Disrupter Screening Program now underway only costs about $10 million
per year. But the cost to industry and consumers will likely stretch into the
billions of dollars. Testing of a single chemical can easily reach into the
millions of dollars.
The Arnold study
began to unravel a mere six months after publication. Scientists from around
the world began to report that they could not reproduce Arnold's results — such
replication of results being a requirement for findings to be considered as
"scientific."
By August 1997,
Arnold was forced to retract his study from publication. His retraction stated,
"We … have not been able to reproduce the results we reported." He
later added, "I can't really explain the original findings."
Now we know why
— he cheated. The penalty imposed on Arnold was a five-year ban from federal
grants.
Although a
lifetime ban and perhaps even criminal prosecution would have been more
appropriate — after all, he was found guilty of "intentionally
falsifying" taxpayer-funded research — the light penalty is not the most
disturbing part of this story.
Arnold's study
has been thoroughly trashed, but the federal law remains and the mandated EPA
testing program is in full bloom.
In August 1999,
an expert committee of the National Academy of Sciences' National Research
Council — a panel that included scientist representatives from the environmental
activist community — reported there was no evidence that chemicals in the
environment were disrupting hormonal processes in humans and wildlife.
That scientific
report was inexplicably insufficient to kill the endocrine disrupter scare. But
now, if proven fraud isn't enough, what is?
Steven
Milloy is the publisher of JunkScience.com ,
an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and the author of Junk Science Judo:
Self-defense Against Health Scares and Scams (Cato Institute, 2001).
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