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                 Posted 
                  22nd June 2001  
                 
                  Science Fails Test  
                 
                  The credibility of university research is on the line as industry 
                  steps up its funding. It was to be a landmark university-corporate 
                  research partnership: Novartis, a Swiss-based pharmaceutical 
                  conglomerate, would pay $25 million over five years to the University 
                  of California at Berkeley. But what the company was to get in 
                  return shocked faculty, students, and outsiders alike. In exchange 
                  for funding, Novartis would be allowed to sift through the research 
                  of the department of plant and microbial biology at Berkeley's 
                  College of Natural Resources - licensing up to about one-third 
                  of the researchers' output. Students declared it a sellout. 
                  Legislators scheduled hearings. Professors protested the secrecy 
                  of the negotiations. 
                 
                  One professor decried the deal for creating an "apartheid" of 
                  have and have-not faculty. Outside observers were no less impassioned. 
                  "What if the [Novartis-Berkeley] experiment were to succeed?" 
                  wrote Robert Rosenzweig, former president of the Association 
                  of American Universities, in response to the deal. "What would 
                  be the next part of the university to be sold to a corporation?" 
                  Portending the turmoil to come, company and university officials 
                  announcing the November 1998 deal at a press conference had 
                  to duck to avoid being hit by a pie. Despite protests, the deal 
                  went through, and administrators report that it is working. 
                  Yet misgivings persist. "This is a public university that is 
                  supposed to work for all sectors of society," says Miguel Altieri, 
                  associate professor at Berkeley. "Obviously the sectors we're 
                  going to be working for in the future are the ones that bring 
                  in the money." Such comments only hint at the vortexes created 
                  by university-corporate partnerships. Critics cite fears over 
                  limits on academic freedom, conflicts of interest among researchers, 
                  and bias creeping into scientific research.  
                Over 
                  the long run, observers also worry that research priorities 
                  might shift away from breaking scientific ground to more short-term, 
                  product-related efforts. And there is the possibility, too, 
                  that the public will lose confidence in higher-education research. 
                  Nelson Kiang, professor emeritus at the Massachusetts Institute 
                  of Technology, has watched the changes during his long career. 
                  What's different today is that "the sheer number of corporations 
                  involved in sponsoring research has exploded," he says. "The 
                  ethos of the university is the free exchange of ideas. Now we're 
                  running into two sets of ideas from two cultures. When they 
                  start to interact intimately, accommodations have to be made. 
                   
                At 
                  the moment, there's no agreed upon way to do that." Acknowledging 
                  a deep divide between corporate America and American universities, 
                  a two-year study issued last week by the Business-Higher Education 
                  Forum - a partnership between the American Council on Education 
                  and the National Alliance of Business - outlined problems and 
                  recommendations for smoothing the rocky road between the two 
                  worlds. "Some research collaborations have experienced serious, 
                  high-profile difficulties," stated Hank McKinell, chairman of 
                  the board of the New York-based pharmaceutical company Pfizer 
                  and co-chair of the report task force. "The report is intended 
                  to help clarify the issues." 
                 
                  Bullies in the lab?  
                One 
                  such issue is academic freedom. Corporate and academic priorities 
                  clash when scientists want to share research discoveries, but 
                  contracts often require secrecy for 30 to 90 days or longer 
                  while patents are weighed. Betty Dong at the University of California, 
                  San Francisco, discovered data that led her to question the 
                  effectiveness of a medication being used daily by millions of 
                  people. But when she went to report it, she was blocked for 
                  seven years by the company that paid for the study. David Kahn, 
                  another researcher at the same school, was sued last November 
                  for $10 million by the company that sponsored his study, after 
                  he published a report that the AIDS drug he was testing was 
                  ineffective."They're like bullies in a sandbox who take away 
                  their toys when you don't agree with them," Dr. Kahn told The 
                  Chronicle of Higher Education. Few foresaw these clashes two 
                  decades ago. Such research partnerships had long been a staple 
                  of American higher education, going all the way back to the 
                  1862 federal legislation that created the land-grant university. 
                  But university research started melding with the business world 
                  at a much faster pace with the 1980 passage of the Bayh-Dole 
                  Act. Bayh-Dole sped up the patenting process for university 
                  research, supercharging university-corporate partnerships with 
                  profits and competition. In the 1970s, just a few hundred patents 
                  resulted from university research each year. But in fiscal 1999, 
                  more than 120 US research universities filed a total of 7,612 
                  patent applications, according to the Association of University 
                  Technology Managers. 
                 
                  Licenses to industry generated $641 million in gross income 
                  for the universities - and about $40 billion in economic activity 
                  overall. "You used to have big corporations with labs that would 
                  do their own basic research," Mr. Kiang says. "But ... it's 
                  much more effective to turn the universities into R&D labs for 
                  them. By sprinkling money around ... they don't have to compete 
                  for the best brains in the academic world, they simply buy them 
                  at low cost." The federal government is still by far the dominant 
                  funding source for university research. In 1998, corporations 
                  were responsible for less than 8 percent of the funding. That 
                  may not sound like much, but it represents a seven-fold growth 
                  since 1970. According to the new report, the flood of patents 
                  has been a big boost to America's increasingly knowledge-based 
                  economy. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told governors 
                  last year: "The payoffs, in terms of the flow of expertise, 
                  new products, and startup companies ... have been impressive." 
                  In some fields, especially medical research, scientists complain 
                  that corporate cash appears to be undermining the credibility 
                  of research results. In 1996, Tufts researcher Sheldon Krimsky 
                  studied nearly 800 scientific papers published in prominent 
                  biology and medical journals. In 1 out of 3 cases, he found 
                  that a chief author of the paper had a financial interest in 
                  the company for which research was being done. 
                 
                  In most cases, the connections were not disclosed to readers. 
                  Mildred Cho, a senior research scholar at the Center for Biomedical 
                  Ethics at Stanford University, took a different tack. Her 1996 
                  study found that 98 percent of university studies of new drug 
                  therapies funded by the pharmaceutical industry reported that 
                  those new therapies were more effective than standard drugs. 
                  By comparison, just 79 percent of studies without industry financing 
                  found the new drugs to be more effective. Other researchers 
                  are disquieted, too. "There has been in some fields a substantial, 
                  industrial-commercial influence," says David Blumenthal, director 
                  of Massachusetts General Hospital's Institute for Health Policy 
                  and a professor at Harvard Medical School. In a 1998 study, 
                  he and colleagues found that 43 percent of scientists - many 
                  of them at university medical centers or schools - had received 
                  at least one research-related gift. About two-thirds said the 
                  gift had been important to their research. Such conflicts are 
                  hardly confined to the medical field. In his 1997 book, "The 
                  Heat Is On," Ross Gelbspan cites professors for not disclosing 
                  that coal and oil companies had funded their studies, which 
                  were used to undercut arguments in favor of reducing greenhouse 
                  gases. 
                 
                  Meanwhile, back at Berkeley, the Novartis funding is winning 
                  converts. Despite what one university official described as 
                  "lingering resentment," only two of 31 faculty members in the 
                  Berkeley department have declined to seek grants ranging from 
                  $60,000 to $200,000 to fund their research, according to the 
                  just-issued report. " 
                  
                  
                   
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