A real conflict of interest.
Just as the supposed connection between thiomersal and autism has been replaced by Green Our Vaccines sloganizing about all the toxins in vaccines, so the specific reference to autism has been diluted with reference to other neurologiciacal and psychological disorders. I often read that one in six US children has some sort of mental health or neurological problem and it is often blamed on toxins in vaccines and in the wider environment. The largest single group are those who are supposed to have ADHD, with 2.4 million children in the USA on medication it accounts for 5 per cent. Depression accounts for another 5 per cent; Obsessive Compulsive Disorder between 1 and 3 per cent; Autistic Spectrum 1 per cent. A more recent addition is Bipolar disorder which moved up the scale from 20,000 diagnoses in 1994 to 800,000 or 1 per cent of US Americans under 20 by 2003.
I am sure that there is a lot of double counting here. Nearly half of all children with bipolar have another diagnosis, usually ADHD. Lots of kids with autism have depression or OCD. Children with Tourettes often have ADHD or OCD. Nevertheless there are a lot of children being diagnosed wth various neurological and psychiatric disorders and for many the treatment of choice is some form of medication.
But for Mark Geier, David Kirby and Brad Handley the broader picture is clear. Never mind the 1 in 150 with autism. They are just the tip of an iceberg. We are looking at 50 million potentially brain damaged US Americans. Something has to be done.
I think that we in the neurodiversity movement have been rightly skeptical of these figures. We understand how the prevalence for autism has been driven up by broadening the criteria, developing better screening and diagnostic tools, increasing awareness and even improving provision. “Build it and they will come come.”
Although there are problems with the abuse of medications with autistic people the big problem for many in the medical profession and for parents has been that there is no autism pill. The search for a pharmacological solution has seduced some autism researchers and led to some famous dead-ends. Frustrated parents have turned instead to alternative practitioners offering the biomedical solutions that I have criticized from the inception of this blog.
Broadly speaking autism numbers have grown in line with our understanding of autism. We have moved from a narrowly defined disorder to a spectrum. We have struggled within that spectrum to strike a balance between the concept of discrete categories of disorder and the dimensional approach which suggests that some of the differences exhibited by autistic people may be welcome additions to the diversity of human wiring. Nevertheless, developments within autism research and the debates they generate tend to take us forward.
But I detect a different process at work with those other categories and dimensions of disorder and well-being. There may not be an autism pill but there is a pill for ADHD, for OCD, for depression etc. Sometimes there are competing pills and off label pills seeking a new niche and a sales opportunity. What if the same pharmaceutical interests that the biomedical autism community revile for there role in obfuscating the question of an autism epidemic in the face of an obvious crisis for the mental health of our children [1 in 6 ferchrissakes!] actually generated that broader crisis in order to boost drug sales?
Now, let me say that I fully support the idea of children as autonomous learners, active agents in their own development. We now recognize the inner life of the child and recognize that when things go wrong and children experience crises in their emotional and psychological development they are entitled to help and understanding. But 1 in 10 ten year old US American boys on medication for ADHD? Something is clearly wrong.
A recent report in the New York Times exposes a real conflict of interest and shows how easily scientists, convinced of their own correctness can seriously compromise, not only their own credibility, but that of colleagues working ethically in the same field.
It may just be a coincidence, but those leading the drive to diagnose and treat bipolar disorder in children are also the recipients of large and undisclosed stipends from the pharmaceutical companies that prescribe the drugs used to treat those children. The key word here is undisclosed.
Doctor Joseph Biederman,
A world-renowned Harvard child psychiatrist whose work has helped fuel an explosion in the use of powerful antipsychotic medicines in children earned at least $1.6 million in consulting fees from drug makers from 2000 to 2007 but for years did not report much of this income to university officials, according to information given Congressional investigators.
By failing to report income, the psychiatrist, Dr. Joseph Biederman, and a colleague in the psychiatry department at Harvard Medical School, Dr. Timothy E. Wilens, may have violated federal and university research rules designed to police potential conflicts of interest, according to Senator Charles E. Grassley, Republican of Iowa. Some of their research is financed by government grants.
Like Dr. Biederman, Dr. Wilens belatedly reported earning at least $1.6 million from 2000 to 2007, and another Harvard colleague, Dr. Thomas Spencer, reported earning at least $1 million after being pressed by Mr. Grassley’s investigators. But even these amended disclosures may understate the researchers’ outside income because some entries contradict payment information from drug makers, Mr. Grassley found.
It is important to remember that the failure to disclose these payments does not automatically negate the work these men have done in the field of bipolar disorder in childhood. But if their financial relationship to the pharmaceutical companies had been known in advance I am sure that their work would have been subject to much more rigorous scrutiny. I hope that it is subject to such scrutiny now and not summarily dismissed.
We in the autism community have seen what arrogance can do when a talented individual like Wakefield becomes so convinced of the correctness of his own position that he disregards the normal conventions of science in the hope that history will vindicate him. But personal conviction can lead to self delusion without the necessary corrective of an honest accounting to your peers. And when we are talking about six figure sums from “Big Pharma” honest accounting takes on a whole new meaning.