Philip Morris
Pro-Tobacco Writer Admits He Should Have Declared An Interest
Fields
- Author
- Ferriman, A.
- Kmietowicz, Z.
- Master ID
- 2085783334/3335
Related Documents:
Document Images
Pro-tobacco writer admits he should have declared an interest
Zosia Kmietowicz, Annabel Ferriman, London
Writer and philosopher Roger Scruton, who was discovered last week to be on the payroll of a large
tobacco
company, has adniitted that he should have "declared an interest" when he wrote a pamphlet attacking
the World
Health Organization for its campaign against tobacco.
He told the BMJ: "Our firm had a consultancy [with Japan Tobacco Industries] at that time. I was
asked
independently to do this [write the pamphlet]. I did not want to mix it up with the consultancy, but
looking back
I should have declared an interest."
As a result of Mr Scruton's fall from grace last week, when his financial connections to Japan
Tobacco
Industries were revealed, the Institute of Economic Affairs the free-
market think tank that published the pamphlet attacking the WHO
has conceded that it nceds an author's declaration policy.
Colin Robinson, the institute's editorial director and a professor of economics at the University of
Surrey, said
that the past few days had represented something of a steep learning curve for those in the field of
social science
academia.
"In the past we have relied on our authors to come forward with any competing interests, but that is
going to
change," said Professor Robinson. "In scientific publishing I suppose this sort of thing has been a
problem
before, but the news of Roger Scruton has made us realise that this kind of thing can happen to us
too, and we
are developing a policy to ensure it doesn't happen again."
In his pamphlet, WHO, What and WAy, Mr Scruton attacked the WHO for tackling tobacco when in his
view it
should have been concentrating on vaccination campaigns and diseases such as malaria and HIV/AIDS.
His
attack was immediately repeated in articles in the Wall Street Journal, the Times, and the Scotsman,
in what
looked like a concerted pro-tobacco campaign (BMJ2000;320:1482[Full Text] </cg / jlink?
linkType=FULL&iournalCode=bmj&resid=320/7247/ 1482>).
Clive Bates, director of the antismoking campaign group Action on Smoking and Health, criticised the
institute
over its poor track record and said that a policy for authors to declare their financial and other
interests was long
overdue.

2085783335
The news that Mr Scruton, who used to be a professor of aesthetics at Birkbeck College, London, had
been
receiving a monthly fee from Japan Tobacco Industries was revealed in the Guardian last week when it
published a leaked email from him to the company (24 January, p 1).
In the email, Mr Scruton, who had been receiving a monthly retainer fee of £4500 ($6300;
7300), asked for a£ 1000 a month pay rise to place more pro-
smoking articles in prestigious newspapers and international magazines. He declared the amount to be
"good
value for money in a business largely conducted by shysters and sharks."
He said that he would aim to place an article every two months in one or other of the Wall Street
Journal, the
Times, the Telegraph, the Spectator, the Financial Times, the Economist, the Independent, and the
New
Statesman.
The email, which was sent last October in the name of Sophie, Mr Scruton's wife and business
partner, reveals a
far-reaching and ambitious public relations strategy to make smoking seem less harmful than it is
and criticise
government policies on advertising as an attack on civil liberties.
It says: "I personally would like to see more explicit mention of other products open to the same
criticisms as
tobacco and which ought to be of equal concern to the WHO. For example, fast-food of the McDonald's
variety,
which seems to be addictive, is aimed at the young, is a serious risk to health, with a worse effect
on life-
expectancy than cigarettes, and unlike cigarettes, has a seriously corrosive effect on social
relations and family
life."
Last week, following the revelations, the Financial Times ended Scruton's contract as a columnist.
Mr Scruton told the BMJ "The pamphlet for the Institute of Economic Affairs arose out of my
longstanding
concerns about the way in which legislative powers are being transferred from sovereign bodies to
unaccountable transnational institutions.
"The pamphlet is a review of arguments and not concerned to exonerate tobacco from the accusation
that it is a
risky product. In retrospect, however, I now see that I should have declared an interest."
Tracking: Recipient Read
Hurwitz, Even Read: 2/1l2002 10:24 AM
2
