An Amgen executive refutes accusations that the company published misleading results of its mid-90s clinical trial testing an anemia drug.
Covering the life sciences inside and out
An Amgen executive refutes accusations that the company published misleading results of its mid-90s clinical trial testing an anemia drug.
People are currently driving the planet on a crash course with global stability. Something must be done.
Financial “conflicts of interest” should not be so quickly condemned. Industry relationships are unequivocally beneficial.
African justice systems must change to help curb HIV and tuberculosis transmission in prisons.
Is the push for science to save the still flailing economy a threat to scientific research?
Successful conservation depends on an economy that doesn’t incentivize destruction of species and habitats.
Amgen’s incomplete report on an early major trial of epoetin misled the medical community about the anemia drug’s risks and benefits—and helped make Amgen rich.
By discouraging change, universities are stunting scientific innovation, leadership, and growth.
A lack of methodological detail in the published literature threatens the foundation of scientific discourse.
A US Fish and Wildlife official responds to the assertion that the northern spotted owl is being mismanaged by government.