A homeopathy researcher is facing investigation after she was filmed admitting âunethical behaviourâ described by journal editors as âscientific misconductâ during a clinical trial to assess the effectiveness of alternative medicines.
Writing in theÌę, editor Jess Fiedorowicz and former editors James Levenson and Albert Leentjens urge authorities to censure Clare Relton, senior lecturer in clinical trials at Queen Mary University of London (QMUL), over her involvement in a triple-blind randomised placebo-controlled trial looking at the efficacy of homeopathic treatment for patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS).
At the time of the University of SheffieldÌę, published in 2004, Dr Relton was working as a homeopath who had contact with some of the 103 participants given either a homeopathic remedy known as carcinosin or a dummy drug. Although the study found no statistically significant clinical improvements among those taking homeopathic treatments comparedÌęwith those on a placebo, it led Dr Relton to complete aÌęÌęon how clinical trials test homeopathy and she has sinceÌęÌęwidely on the issue.
At a homeopathy conference in June 2019, however, she told an audience that she realised there was âa cunning way of circumventing the blindingâ of the trial, which ensured both participants and practitioners were unaware of who was receiving a placebo, by giving all her clients a dose of the drug in question.
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In its new paper, the journal recounts how Dr Relton explained in the talk â which is â that she believed that if trial participants came back at the second appointment with no change in symptoms, âthen we know they are on the placeboâ.
Âé¶čopaths should use their âamazing skillsâ such as âdeep listening, deep understanding of what we know is toxic in our systems, about diet and counsellingâ and âdonât bother doing all that trying to find the right remedyâ, she added.
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On the issue of giving placebos to patients, she added: âWeâre trained to treat people. Iâm not trained to be deceiving people.â
That description of how participants were treated is âundisputable evidence of scientific misconductâ, and âunethical behaviourâ which âwarrants formal censure from the scientific communityâ, the journal claims.
âNot only did she deceive patients, but also the researchers and study leaders that she is supposed to collaborate with as a colleague,â the editors conclude.
In a statement, Dr Relton said that she was a âhomeopath, not a researcher, when I took part in the trialâ and âin this clinical capacity I tried to give the best treatment for each of the 10 CFS patients who I treatedâ. âThis included an attempt towards the end of the trial to deduce whether or not my patient was on [the] placebo,â she added.
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This attempt was based on her belief in the effectiveness of homeopathic medicine, a âdesire to help the patients who consulted me for a condition for which there was very little being offered by traditional methodsâ and âfrustration at [the] trial designâ.
Despite the alleged ethical breaches, the journal decided not to retract the paper because it concluded the ârigorous scientific design provided evidence that the outcome of the study was not affected by the misconductâ.
A spokesman for QMUL said that it âmaintains robust policies and procedures that ensure all our research is conducted to the highest standards of integrityâ and was âlooking into these allegationsâ.
Alan Henness, director of theÌę, which challenges misleading healthcare claims and reported Dr Reltonâs talk to the journal, toldÌęTHEÌęthat the episode highlighted the problem of homeopathic research which, he said, was âmostly conducted by those already indoctrinated into the belief system of homeopathyâ.
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