US asks science journals to censor bird flu studies

Dunya News

The journals are objecting to the request, saying it would restrict access to information.

The US government has asked the scientific journals Nature and Science to censor data on a lab-made version of bird flu that could spread more easily to humans, fearing it could be used as a potential weapon.The US National Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity asked the two journals to publish redacted versions of studies by two research groups that created forms of the H5N1 avian flu that could easily jump between ferrets - typically considered a sign the virus could spread quickly among humans.The journals are objecting to the request, saying it would restrict access to information that might advance the cause of public health.The request was a first for the expert panel, formed after a series of anthrax attacks on US targets in 2001. It advises the Department of Health and Human Services and other federal agencies about dual use research that could serve public health but also be a potential bioterror threat.The bird flu virus is extremely deadly in people who are directly exposed to infected birds but so far it has not mutated into a form that can pass easily from person to person.The National Institutes of Health funded the two research labs work to see how the virus could become more transmissible in humans, with the aim of getting early insight to contain threats to public health.The NSABB wants to keep this information from falling into the wrong hands.The articles involved work done by Yoshihiro Kawaoka, a University of Wisconsin-Madison scientist, and Dr Ron Fouchier and colleagues from the Erasmus Medical Centre in Rotterdam.The National Institutes of Health said the health department agreed with the panels assessment and gave the journals non-binding recommendations to withhold key elements of the studies.But the NIH said the government is working out a system to allow secure access to the information to those with a legitimate need to see it.Dr Bruce Alberts, editor in chief of Science, said the advisory board asked the journal to delete details on the scientific methods and specific mutations of the virus before publishing an article by Fouchier and colleagues.He said many scientists who study influenza have a need to know the details of the research to protect the public. He said Science is evaluating how best to proceed.Other researchers voiced concern over government censorship of science.