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Volume 353:1060-1065 September 8, 2005 Number 10
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Regulating Academic–Industrial Research Relationships — Solving Problems or Stifling Progress?
Thomas P. Stossel, M.D.

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Biomedical research takes place in university health centers, in government laboratories, and in the laboratories of pharmaceutical and medical-device companies, but only industry translates the research into products. Until the 1970s, academic researchers rarely worked on applied technologies, although they conducted clinical trials for companies and industry exploited academic basic research. Then, the revolution in molecular genetics that enabled investigators to produce large quantities of rare molecules with medicinal properties brought these groups closer together. Academic researchers joined venture capitalists in founding the biotechnology industry, leading to immense benefits — for example, the hepatitis B vaccine.1 The participation of prominent . . . [Full Text of this Article]

The Evolution of Regulations

Justifications of Regulation and Counterarguments

Research Misbehavior

Bias

Secrecy

Academic Freedom

Quality of Research

Appearances and Public Trust

Regulation as Overreaction

Effects of the Regulations

The Future


Source Information

From Harvard Medical School and the Hematology Division, Brigham and Women's Hospital — both in Boston.


Related Letters:

Academic–Industrial Relationships
Arbit E., Brody H., Miller F. G., Stossel T. P.
Extract | Full Text | PDF  
N Engl J Med 2005; 353:2720-2722, Dec 22, 2005. Correspondence

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