On Being a Whistleblower: The Needleman Case
Creator
Ernhart, Claire B.
Scarr, Sandra
Geneson, David F.
Bibliographic Citation
Ethics and Behavior. 1993; 3(1): 73-93.
Abstract
We believe that members of the scientific community have a primary obligation to promote integrity in research and that this obligation includes a duty to report observations that suggest misconduct to agencies that are empowered to examine and evaluate such evidence. Consonant with this responsibility, we became whistleblowers in the case of Herbert Needleman. His 1979 study (Needleman et al., 1979), on the effects of low-level lead exposure on children, is widely cited and highly influential in the formulation of public policy on lead. The opportunity we had to examine subject selection and data analyses from this study was prematurely halted by efforts to prevent disclosure of our observations. Nevertheless, what we saw left us with serious concerns. We hope that the events here summarized will contribute to revisions of process by which allegations of scientific misconduct are handled and that such revisions will result in less damage to scientists who speak out.
Date
1993Subject
Accountability; Biomedical Research; Children; Disclosure; Due Process; Epidemiology; Federal Government; Fraud; Government; Government Regulation; Guidelines; Health; Health Hazards; Intelligence; Investigators; Legal Aspects; Misconduct; Peer Review; Public Policy; Regulation; Research; Research Design; Review; Science; Scientific Misconduct; Self Regulation; Terminology; Universities; Whistleblowing;
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On Being a Whistleblower: The Needleman Case
Ernhart, Claire B.; Scarr, Sandra; Geneson, David F. (1993)