Physician scientist Nancy Olivieri describes hard-won lessons from decades of fighting for scientific integrity.
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Working scientist profiles
This article is part of an occasional series in which Nature profiles scientists with unusual career histories or outside interests.
The image of a lone scientist standing up for integrity against a pharmaceutical giant seems romantic and compelling. But to haematologist Nancy Olivieri, who went public when the company sponsoring her drug trial for a genetic blood disorder tried to suppress data about harmful side effects, the experience was as unglamorous as it was damaging and isolating. “There’s a lot of people who fight for justice in research integrity and against the pharmaceutical industry, but very few people know what it’s like to take on the hospital administrators” too, she says.
Now, after more than 30 years of ostracization by colleagues, several job losses and more than 20 lawsuits — some of which are ongoing — Olivieri is still amazed that what she saw as efforts to protect her patients could have proved so controversial, and that so few people took her side. Last year, she won the John Maddox Prize, a partnership between the London-based charity Sense about Science and Nature, which recognizes “researchers who stand up and speak out for science” and who achieve changes amid hostility. “It’s absolutely astounding to me that you could become famous as a physician for saying, ‘I...
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