Literature DB >> 22643985

Methods and management: NIH administrators, federal oversight, and the Framingham Heart Study.

Sejal S Patel1.   

Abstract

This article explores the 1965 controversy over the Framingham Heart Study in the midst of growing oversight into the management of science at the National Institutes of Health (NIH). It describes how, beginning in the early 1960s, federal overseers demanded that NIH administrators adopt particular management styles in administering programs and how these growing pressures led administrators to favor investigative pursuits that allowed for easy prospective accounting of program payoffs, especially those based on experimental methods designed to examine discrete interventions or outcomes of interest. In light of this changing managerial culture within the NIH, the Framingham study and other population laboratories-with their bases in observation and in open-ended study designs-became harder for NIH administrators to justify and defend.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22643985      PMCID: PMC3368344          DOI: 10.1353/bhm.2012.0017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bull Hist Med        ISSN: 0007-5140            Impact factor:   1.314


  15 in total

1.  Politics, science, and dread disease.

Authors:  S P Strickland
Journal:  Trans Stud Coll Physicians Phila       Date:  1975-07

2.  An approach to longitudinal studies in a community: the Framingham Study.

Authors:  T R DAWBER; W B KANNEL; L P LYELL
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  1963-05-22       Impact factor: 5.691

3.  Becoming the Framingham Study 1947-1950.

Authors:  Gerald M Oppenheimer
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Organization, review, and administration of cooperative studies (Greenberg Report): a report from the Heart Special Project Committee to the National Advisory Heart Council, May 1967.

Authors: 
Journal:  Control Clin Trials       Date:  1988-06

5.  The field trial: some thoughts on the indispensable ordeal.

Authors:  D S Fredrickson
Journal:  Bull N Y Acad Med       Date:  1968-08

Review 6.  Epidemiology in the United States after World War II: the evolution of technique.

Authors:  M Susser
Journal:  Epidemiol Rev       Date:  1985       Impact factor: 6.222

7.  Scientific basis for the support of biomedical science.

Authors:  J H Comroe; R D Dripps
Journal:  Science       Date:  1976-04-09       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Biomedical research in the 1980s.

Authors:  D S Fredrickson
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1981-02-26       Impact factor: 91.245

9.  A multivariate analysis of the risk of coronary heart disease in Framingham.

Authors:  J Truett; J Cornfield; W Kannel
Journal:  J Chronic Dis       Date:  1967-07

10.  Harold Fred Dorn and the First National Cancer Survey (1937-1939): the founding of modern cancer epidemiology.

Authors:  David E Lilienfeld
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2008-06-12       Impact factor: 9.308

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  2 in total

1.  Organizing for ontological change: The kernel of an AIDS research infrastructure.

Authors:  David Ribes; Jessica Beth Polk
Journal:  Soc Stud Sci       Date:  2015-04       Impact factor: 3.885

2.  The Duogynon controversy and ignorance production in post-thalidomide West Germany.

Authors:  Birgit Nemec; Jesse Olszynko-Gryn
Journal:  Reprod Biomed Soc Online       Date:  2021-10-19
  2 in total

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