ICMR left indelible mark on India’s healthcare landscape: Nadda
Union Health Minister Jagat Prakash Nadda said on Thursday that the Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has left an indelible mark on the country’s healthcare landscape.
ICMR, DG, Dr Rajiv Bahl, in the letter, said that the apex research body cannot be associated with this poorly-designed study which purports to present a “safety analysis” of Covaxin.
The Indian Council of Medical Research (ICMR) has rejected a recent study led by Banaras Hindu University (BHU), which claimed that Covaxin raised the rare risk of stroke, and Guillain-Barre syndrome, among others, and said that the findings are “misleading.”
The ICMR has written to the Editor of the New Zealand-based Drug Safety Journal to retract the recently-published Covaxin side effects study by authors from BHU as the apex research body has been “incorrectly and misleadingly acknowledged in the paper.”
“The ICMR is not associated with this study and has not provided any financial or technical support for the research,” the apex research body wrote in the letter.
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“Further, you have acknowledged ICMR for research support without any prior approval of or intimation to lCMR, which is inappropriate and unacceptable,” it added.
ICMR, DG, Dr Rajiv Bahl, in the letter, said that the apex research body cannot be associated with this poorly-designed study which purports to present a “safety analysis” of Covaxin.
Dr Bahl has asked the study’s authors and the journal’s editor to remove the acknowledgement to ICMR and publish an erratum.
“We have also noticed that you have similarly acknowledged ICMR in similar previous papers without permission,” Dr Bahl wrote.
He also asked for an explanation from the study’s authors on “why ICMR should not seek legal and administrative action” against them.
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