Epistemic Corruption, the Pharmaceutical Industry, and the Body of Medical Science

Front Res Metr Anal. 2021 Mar 8:6:614013. doi: 10.3389/frma.2021.614013. eCollection 2021.

Abstract

When a knowledge system importantly loses integrity, ceasing to provide the kinds of trusted knowledge expected of it, we can label this epistemic corruption. Epistemic corruption often occurs because the system has been co-opted for interests at odds with some of the central goals thought to lie behind it. There is now abundant evidence that the involvement of pharmaceutical companies corrupts medical science. Within the medical community, this is generally assumed to be the result of conflicts of interest. However, some important ways that the industry corrupts are not captured well by standard analyses in terms of conflicts of interest. It is not just that there is a body of medical science perverted by industry largesse. Instead, much of the corruption of medical science via the pharmaceutical industry happens through grafting activities: Pharmaceutical companies do their own research and smoothly integrate it with medical science, taking advantage of the legitimacy of the latter.

Keywords: bias; conflict of interest; epistemic corruption; medical research; pharmaceutical industry.