Rachel Aviv
profiles a scientist whose research indicates atrazine may cause birth defects in frogs (and humans), and Syngenta's efforts to discredit his, and others' work:
Hayes has devoted the past fifteen years to studying atrazine, and
during that time scientists around the world have expanded on his
findings, suggesting that the herbicide is associated with birth defects
in humans as well as in animals. The company documents show that, while
Hayes was studying atrazine, Syngenta was studying him, as he had long
suspected. Syngenta’s public-relations team had drafted a list of four
goals. The first was “discredit Hayes.” In a spiral-bound notebook,
Syngenta’s communications manager, Sherry Ford, who referred to Hayes by
his initials, wrote that the company could “prevent citing of TH data
by revealing him as noncredible.” He was a frequent topic of
conversation at company meetings. Syngenta looked for ways to “exploit
Hayes’ faults/problems.” “If TH involved in scandal, enviros will drop
him,” Ford wrote. She observed that Hayes “grew up in world (S.C.) that
wouldn’t accept him,” “needs adulation,” “doesn’t sleep,” was “scarred
for life.” She wrote, “What’s motivating Hayes?—basic question.”
Syngenta,
which is based in Basel, sells more than fourteen billion dollars’
worth of seeds and pesticides a year and funds research at some four
hundred academic institutions around the world. When Hayes agreed to do
experiments for the company (which at that time was part of a larger
corporation, Novartis), the students in his lab expressed concern that
biotech companies were “buying up universities” and that industry
funding would compromise the objectivity of their research. Hayes
assured them that his fee, a hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars,
would make their lab more rigorous. He could employ more students, buy
new equipment, and raise more frogs. Though his lab was well funded,
federal support for research was growing increasingly unstable, and,
like many academics and administrators, he felt that he should find new
sources of revenue. “I went into it as if I were a painter, performing a
service,” Hayes told me. “You commissioned it, and I come up with the
results, and you do what you want with them. It’s your responsibility,
not mine.”
Atrazine is the second most widely used herbicide
in the U.S., where sales are estimated at about three hundred million
dollars a year. Introduced in 1958, it is cheap to produce and controls a
broad range of weeds. (Glyphosate, which is produced by Monsanto, is
the most popular herbicide.) A study by the Environmental Protection
Agency found that without atrazine the national corn yield would fall by
six per cent, creating an annual loss of nearly two billion dollars.
But the herbicide degrades slowly in soil and often washes into streams
and lakes, where it doesn’t readily dissolve. Atrazine is one of the
most common contaminants of drinking water; an estimated thirty million
Americans are exposed to trace amounts of the chemical.
The whole story is worth reading. This study is scary sounding for residents in the Midwest:
That year, a paper in Acta Paediatrica, reviewing national
records for thirty million births, found that children conceived between
April and July, when the concentration of atrazine (mixed with other
pesticides) in water is highest, were more likely to have genital birth
defects. The author of the paper, Paul Winchester, a professor of
pediatrics at the Indiana University School of Medicine, received a
subpoena from Syngenta, which requested that he turn over every e-mail
he had written about atrazine in the past decade. The company’s media
talking points described his study as “so-called science” that didn’t
meet the “guffaw test.” Winchester said, “We don’t have to argue that I
haven’t proved the point. Of course I haven’t proved the point!
Epidemiologists don’t try to prove points—they look for problems.”
Also, this:
Syngenta denied repeated requests for interviews, but Ann Bryan, its
senior manager for external communications, told me in an e-mail that
some of the studies I was citing were unreliable or unsound. When I
mentioned a recent paper in the American Journal of Medical Genetics,
which showed associations between a mother’s exposure to atrazine and
the likelihood that her son will have an abnormally small penis,
undescended testes, or a deformity of the urethra—defects that have
increased in the past several decades—she said that the study had been
“reviewed by independent scientists, who found numerous flaws.” She
recommended that I speak with the author of the review, David Schwartz, a
neuroscientist, who works for Innovative Science Solutions, a
consulting firm that specializes in “product defense” and strategies
that “give you the power to put your best data forward.” Schwartz told
me that epidemiological studies can’t eliminate confounding variables or
make claims about causation. “We’ve been incredibly misled by this type
of study,” he said.
The article definitely hits on the inherent limitations of scientific research making the step from correlation to causation, especially when extremely well-funded opponents' profitability is threatened. It is hard to look at Syngenta's efforts and not see similarities to the 50 year battle of cigarette companies against research linking smoking with cancer, as well as the energy industry and Republican party's war on climate science. It is notable that one of the communities featured in a New York Times
article about public water systems which have found large concentrations of atrazine in their drinking water is Piqua, the city closest to my home, and the one in which I work. This is definitely a potential problem with the greatest likelihood of significance in the Midwest.
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