My poster for Dr. David Healy’s post “Marilyn’s Curse” about medication, Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs), and the way medical research uses “randomization” to hide dangerous side effects.
See More: Marilyn’s Curse
Illustration for Dr. David Healy‘s post about the vagaries of diving, fishing and looking for real data in the murky world medicine and pharmaceuticals.
See: April Fool in Harlow: Anecdote Fishing in Harlow
And sure, this is an “April Fool’s” thing, but it’s actually based on some truth… If you want to find out more about the GSK approach to “Open Science” and the “sharing” of research data, you can actually sign up for the GSK Clinical Study data program. Once you’ve signed off off on their legal stuff (caveat emptor), you can request access to their trial data. Currently they have about 220 trials listed… a extremely small fraction of the total trials they’ve done. Your request will be reviewed by independent panel who will decide whether or not you can actually see the data. No promises of course! But why don’t you give it a try… I’ve signed up! ;-)
See: https://clinicalstudydata.gsk.com/
Posters: OpenGSK.pdf, OpenGSK.jpg or OpenGSK.png.
Posted: April 1st, 2013
Categories:
Creative,
Science
Tags:
April Fool's,
art,
Big Pharma,
Clinical Trials,
Dr David Healy,
Glaxo,
GlaxoSmithKline,
GSK,
open data,
open science,
openscience,
RCT
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