Welcome to the Nexus of Ethics, Psychology, Morality, Philosophy and Health Care

Welcome to the nexus of ethics, psychology, morality, technology, health care, and philosophy

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Catastrophic neglect of the basic sciences in medicine

The Lancet, Volume 379, Issue 9823, Page 1273, 7 April 2012

Talk with scientists who work in research-intensive schools of medicine and you hear a resonant message. The basic medical sciences are not only being neglected, they are being systematically eroded. This marginalisation will have damaging effects on clinical care over the next two decades. The foundations of fundamental knowledge about health will be fractured. The platform for applied research will have atrophied. Patient care will be harmed by the prevailing short-sighted and expedient approach to discovery science.

(cut)

The errors seem to be multiple. Project grants—3-year investments of modest sums (£300 000) into the careers of young scientists—have withered. Scientists tell us that this dramatic shift in policy—converting our funding bodies into versions of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute—is a laudable objective, but one with unanticipated negative consequences. Not the least of which is the excision of investment into future generations of young medical researchers. Such a perilous policy, pursued by some research councils and larger charities alike, is being driven by a political environment that emphasises big science and aggresive commercial returns on research investments.