Two of the retracted studies were cited by a judge in a case that could see the abortion pill recalled.
The Charlotte Lozier Institute (CLI) makes no effort to hide its ties to the pro-life cause.
As the 501(c)(3) research and education arm of Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, the institute is forthright about where it stands on abortion and other reproductive issues.
Since its founding in 2011, the organizationâs network of scholars in medicine, public health, science, and other disciplines has published dozens of peer-reviewed studies on those topics. And, until recently, that hadnât posed a problem.
But when a Texas judge cited CLI research in his opinion halting the U.S. Food and Drug Administrationâs (FDA) approval of the abortion drug mifepristone, the instituteâs work became the subject of scrutiny.
On Feb. 5, that scrutiny culminated in Sage Journalsâs retraction of three CLI studiesâincluding the two cited in the judgeâs rulingâclaiming a conflict of interest and âfundamental problemsâ with how they were conducted.
Now, the researchers behind those studies are pushing back on what they see as a politically motivated attack on their work and integrity.
Into the Spotlight
The Supreme Courtâs June 2022 reversal of Roe v. Wade opened the floodgates to all manner of abortion-related lawsuits.
Amid the flurry of ensuing litigation, Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. FDA was filed, challenging the FDAâs approval of mifepristone.
The plaintiffs in the lawsuit held that the agency failed to adequately assess the drugâs safety before approving its use in 2000. Finding their arguments convincing, U.S. District Judge Matthew Kacsmaryk granted a preliminary injunction, pausing the approval for the duration of the case.
In issuing the order, the judge cited two CLI studies concerning the emergency room utilization of women who underwent chemical or surgical abortions.
An appeals court later ruled that mifepristone could stay on the marketâwith certain restrictionsâas the litigation continued. But by that point, CLI had been thrust into the spotlight.
Retracted
In June 2023, less than two months after Judge Kacsmarykâs ruling, the researchers he cited received a shocking notice: Sage was investigating their work.
South University pharmaceutical sciences professor Chris Adkins had complained to Sage about an apparent conflict of interest given that the authors were affiliated with CLI.
However, according to CLI Senior Research Associate Tessa Longbons Cox, she and her co-authors were upfront about their ties to CLI when they submitted their papers to Sage.
âIt was no secret that we were affiliated with Lozier Instituteâwe all reported that,â Ms. Longbons Cox told The Epoch Times.
âWe reported that the studies were funded by Lozier Institute. We even included a short bio for each author with more information on our work and what we did, and where we were employed. So certainly, we are making no secret of that fact. But to have that considered a conflict of interest is certainly not in line with how Sage has handled this sort of issue before,â she said.
Mr. Adkins, meanwhile, has made no secret of his own supportive stance on abortion.
Elaborating on his views, he added: âI now have a daughter that is born in a world where there is no Roe v. Wade, no federal recognition that women have the right of bodily autonomy. And just, I donât know. ⌠Iâm going to support her in whatever way I can.â
The retraction notice was published just one week after the Supreme Court announced it would hear oral arguments in the mifepristone case on March 26.
Sage did not respond to a request for comment.
âNot Backing Downâ
The political implications are difficult to ignore for Dr. James Studnicki, CPI vice president of data analytics and the retracted studiesâ lead author.
âI think Dobbs really accelerated this,â Dr. Studnicki said in a statement. âThereâs a sense of desperation among those in the abortion industry. Theyâve always had the literature to themselves. All of the major health associations are pro-abortion, most of the journals are pro-abortion, all the academic departments in the universities are pro-abortion.â
Dr. Studnicki, who trained at Johns Hopkins University, has spent a half-century conducting scientific research. He was also a member of the editorial board at Health Services Research and Managerial Epidemiologyâthe journal that published the three studiesâuntil the retractions led to his removal.
âItâs profoundly sad to me what is going on in science today,â he said. âIâm at a point in my life, at 80 years old, where they wonât damage me. But what if I was a mid-career faculty member or someone aiming for tenure or trying to raise a family?
âRight now, the science industryâs message appears to be, âIf we can do this to Dr. Studnicki, whoâs had a 50-year career without blemish, imagine what we can do to you,ââ he pointed out.
Despite their disappointment, Ms. Longbons Cox said she and her fellow researchers were not without hope of recourse.
âWeâre working through the legal process, you know, want to make sure weâre doing everything we can to defend ourselves and defend our work,â she said.
âAlso, weâre not stopping researching. Thatâs the reason we exist. Thatâs why we do what we do, and weâre already thinking through what other studies can be published,â she continued.
âWith all of the criticism and pushback weâve received on these, can we use any of that to make our work in the future even stronger and think through new questions that need to be asked and answered? So we are not backing down.â
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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