US COVID-origins hearing puts scientific journals in the hot seat


Brad Wenstrup (right), a Republican from Ohio who chairs the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic, speaks with Raul Ruiz (left), a Democrat from California who is ranking member of the subcommittee.Credit: Al Drago/Bloomberg/Getty

During a public hearing in Washington DC today, Republicans in the US House of Representatives alleged that government scientists unduly influenced the editors of scientific journals and that, in turn, those publications stifled discourse about the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic. Democrats clapped back, lambasting their Republican colleagues for making such accusations without adequate evidence and for sowing distrust of science.

The session is the latest in a series of hearings held by the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic to explore where the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus came from, despite a lack of any new scientific evidence. Scientists have for some time been arguing over whether the virus spread naturally, from animals to people, or whether it leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China. Some have alleged that in the early days of the pandemic, government scientists Anthony Fauci, former director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Francis Collins, former director of the US National Institutes of Health (NIH), steered the scientific community, including journals, to dismiss the lab-leak hypothesis.

During the pandemic, “rather than journals being a wealth of information”, they instead “put a chilling effect on scientific research regarding the origins of COVID-19”, Brad Wenstrup, a Republican representative from Ohio who is chair of the subcommittee, said at the hearing. Raul Ruiz, a Democratic representative from California who is the ranking member of the subcommittee, shot back: “Congress should not be meddling in the peer-review process, and it should not be holding hearings to throw around baseless accusations.”

Holden Thorp, editor-in-chief of the Science family of journals in Washington DC, appeared before the committee to deny the suggestion that he had been coerced or censored by government scientists.

The subcommittee also invited Magdalena Skipper, Nature’s editor-in-chief, and Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the medical journal The Lancet, to appear, but neither was present. Skipper was absent owing to scheduling conflicts, but a spokesperson for Springer Nature says the company is “committed to remaining engaged with the Subcommittee and to assisting in its inquiry”. (Nature’s news team is editorially independent of its journals team and of its publisher, Springer Nature.) The Lancet did not respond to requests for comment.

Academic influence?

This is not the first time that Republicans have accused members of the scientific community of colluding with Fauci and Collins. Evolutionary biologist Kristian Andersen and virologist Robert Garry appeared before the same subcommittee on 11 July last year to deny allegations that the officials prompted them to publish a commentary in Nature Medicine1 in March 2020 concluding that SARS-CoV-2 showed no signs of genetic engineering. They wrote in the journal that they did not “believe that any type of laboratory-based scenario is plausible” for the virus’s origins.

Portrait of Holden Thorp

Holden Thorp became editor-in-chief of the Science family of journals in 2019.Credit: Steve Exum

Some lab-leak proponents have suggested, without evidence, that the pandemic began because the NIH funded risky coronavirus research at a lab in Wuhan, offering a motive for Collins and Fauci to promote a natural origin for COVID-19.

During the latest hearing, Republicans went a step further to suggest that not only did Collins and Fauci influence prominent biologists, but that they also encouraged journals to publish research supporting the natural-origin hypothesis. This accusation is based on e-mails that Wenstrup says the subcommittee obtained showing communication between top journal editors and government scientists. Thorp forcefully denied this line of questioning. “No government officials prompted or participated in the review or editing” of two key papers2,3 on COVID-19’s origins published in Science, he testified. “Any papers supporting the lab-origin theory would go through the very same processes” of peer review as any other paper, he said.

Thorp otherwise spent much of the 80-minute hearing answering questions about how a scientific manuscript is prepared for publication, what a preprint is and how peer review works. In a tense moment, Wenstrup questioned a social-media post on Thorp’s personal X (formerly Twitter) page, in which he downplayed the lab-leak hypothesis. Thorp called the post “flippant” and apologised.

Communication queries

Correspondence between journal editors and government scientists is to be expected, Deborah Ross, a Democratic representative from North Carolina, said at the hearing. “Government actors querying academia on issues that are academic in nature isn’t malpractice or unlawful — it’s just doing their jobs.”

Anita Desikan, a senior analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists who is based in Washington DC and focuses on scientific integrity, tells Nature’s news team that it is customary for government agencies to reach out to stakeholders to inform policy decisions. Even if a government scientist suggests an idea for a journal paper, “that doesn’t mean it will be published or receive praise from the scientific community”.

Roger Pielke Jr, a science-policy researcher at the University of Colorado Boulder, who was originally slated to testify before the subcommittee until his invitation was rescinded owing to logistical reasons, disagrees. He thinks that Fauci and Collins still shaped the Nature Medicine COVID-19 origins paper by recommending that specific scientists investigate and by offering advice along the way. Nevertheless, the hearing was a “dud”, Pielke Jr says, because Thorp was the wrong witness. Instead, a more relevant witness would have been a government scientific-integrity officer who is more knowledgeable about what constitutes an ethical breach, he adds.



Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Local cardiology practice among 16 paying $17M for allegedly violating False Claims Act

BOWLING GREEN, Ky. – A total of 16 cardiology practices have agreed to pay a total of nearly $17.7 million to resolve allegations that they each violated the False Claims Act, including a practice in Warren County. The United States Attorney’s Office, Western District of Kentucky provided a release Friday stating the government alleges that

Another pandemic is inevitable, and we’re not ready

F.D. Flam Every week or so, scientists issue another warning that the H5N1 bird flu is inching closer to exploding into a pandemic. Despite having contended with a pandemic that broke out less than five years ago, the U.S. has no solid plan to handle a new one — nor have our leaders done anything to incorporate

Louisiana forbids public health workers from promoting COVID, flu and mpox shots : Shots

Physician assistant Danis Walker vaccinates a construction worker outside a Lowes Home Improvement store in New Orleans on June 11, 2021. Rosemary Westwood/WWNO hide caption toggle caption Rosemary Westwood/WWNO A group of high-level managers at the Louisiana Department of Health walked into a Nov. 14 meeting in Baton Rouge expecting to talk about outreach and

The Coronavirus Test Kits Market: Trends, Growth, and Outlook

Coronavirus Test Kits Market The global outbreak of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic catalyzed unprecedented demand for diagnostic tools, thrusting the coronavirus test kits market into the spotlight. As countries scrambled to curb the spread of the virus, the development, production, and deployment of test kits became a global priority. This article delves into the dynamics

Fauci was told by Feb. 2020 that COVID was already ‘adapted’ to humans

U.S. and Chinese government officials knew as early as February 2020 that the emerging novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 had already been well-adapted to humans – an early signal not only that it would spread efficiently, but also that it may not have emerged at the Wuhan wet market. Recently released chat messages indicate that

Three questions on “The Missed Opportunity for Reform in the Wake of COVID-19”

This conversation is with the authors of the chapter “Everything Is Different but Nothing Is New: The Missed Opportunity for Reform in the Wake of COVID-19” in our new co-edited book, Recentering Learning: Complexity, Resilience, and Adaptability in Higher Education (JHU Press, 2024). The book (in paper and ebook form) is available for order from

What is health equity and how can it help achieve universal health coverage?

    Universal Health Coverage (UHC) means everyone can access healthcare without financial hardship, but progress towards achieving this has stalled. The latest research on achieving UHC also focuses on the need for health equity, which is when everyone can attain their full health and wellbeing potential. This will require a willingness by healthcare leaders

Moderna | History, Innovation, Challenges, & Facts

Moderna uses mRNA technology to combat COVID-19, RSV, cancer, and rare diseases. © Plexi Images/GHI/UCG—Universal Images Group/Getty Images Share price: $38.36 (mkt close, Dec. 18, 2024) Annual revenue: $5.08 bil. Earnings per share (prev. year): $-5.81 Moderna, Inc. is a biotechnology company specializing in messenger RNA (mRNA) medicines and is best known for developing one

American lifespans increased in 2023

Average life expectancy in the U.S. increased by almost a year in 2023, rebounding to a level not reached since the COVID-19 pandemic, according to figures released Thursday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. U.S. average life expectancy was 78.4 years in 2023 ‒ nearly 11 months longer than in 2022 ‒ mostly

New long COVID index highlights five symptom subtypes

RECOVER-Adult study reveals refined thresholds and symptom categorization, advancing research into long COVID’s complexities. Study: 2024 Update of the RECOVER-Adult Long COVID Research Index. Image Credit: Branislav Nenin / Shutterstock.com The 2023 research index for adults with post-coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) condition or long COVID has been updated using additional participant data from the Researching COVID

How Many People Have Died from COVID-19? A Look at the Virus Four Years Later

What’s New Deaths from COVID-19 have slowed significantly but continue adding to a tally of more than 7 million deaths from the virus in the nearly five years since the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a pandemic. Why It Matters The world was transformed by the emergence of SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes COVID-19. Business

COVID-19 And RSV Present In Los Alamos County Wastewater – Los Alamos Reporter

COUNTY NEWS RELEASE Recent data from the CDC National Wastewater Surveillance System indicates very high COVID-19 activity in New Mexico, based on wastewater samples collected from Santa Fe and Bernalillo counties between December 1 and December 7. In Los Alamos County, BioBot Analytics data shows COVID-19 concentrations in the Los Alamos townsite wastewater decreased from 10 million copies per liter

Data: COVID-19 activity is high in New Mexico

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the New Mexico Department of Health is showing high COVID-19 activity in our state. The CDC tests wastewater to detect traces of several infectious diseases, including COVID. According to data from wastewater sites in Bernalillo County and Santa Fe, which serve 650,000

Novavax is as protective as other Covid vaccines, but has fewer side effects

The first time I got a Novavax Covid vaccine, it felt almost subversive. Over the previous few years, every mRNA-based booster I’d gotten — the ones made by Moderna and Pfizer — had felt like a two-day bout of the flu. I’d gamely booked sick days into my calendar and sucked it up through fevers,

Long COVID affects 8.4% of U.S. adults, with income and geography shaping impact

Millions of Americans struggle with long COVID, as new data reveals how income, geography, and gender amplify its debilitating effects. Research Letter: Prevalence of Post–COVID-19 Condition and Activity-Limiting Post–COVID-19 Condition Among Adults. Image Credit: p.ill.i / Shutterstock In a recent study published in JAMA Network Open, researchers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention explored the

Hydroxychloroquine study retracted; drug isn’t treatment for COVID

A discredited study that set off a flurry of interest in using an antimalarial drug to treat COVID-19 has now been formally withdrawn. A scientific journal on Tuesday retracted the March 2020 study that introduced the world to hydroxychloroquine early in the COVID-19 pandemic – and confirmed that the attention was undeserved from the start.

COVID: Updated CDC Map Reveals Infection Rates Across US

Coronavirus infections in the United States are up in December, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The week that ended Saturday, December 7, saw test positivity rates rise to 5.4 percent; higher than the last week of November (4 percent) and the week before (4.5 percent). Rates

5 Things to Know About COVID-19 Before the Holiday Season

The holidays come each year and often bring with them seasonal sickness, whether it’s driven by seeing family for the holiday, traveling, or the cold weather. COVID-19 remains a prevalent health issue in the US, with the rate of COVID-19 hospitalizations reaching 16.5 per 100,000 persons in the current 2024-2025 season.1 With this number expected

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x