Henry Carol J, Conrad James W
American Chemistry Council, Arlington, Virginia, USA.
Environ Health Perspect. 2008 Jan;116(1):136-41. doi: 10.1289/ehp.9978.
This article originated from a conference that asked "Should scientific work conducted for purposes of advocacy before regulatory agencies or courts be judged by the same standards as science conducted for other purposes?" In the article, which focuses on the regulatory advocacy context, we argue that it can be and should be. First, we describe a set of standards and practices currently being used to judge the quality of scientific research and testing and explain how these standards and practices assist in judging the quality of research and testing regardless of why the work was conducted. These standards and practices include the federal Information Quality Act, federal Good Laboratory Practice standards, peer review, disclosure of funding sources, and transparency in research policies. The more that scientific information meets these standards and practices, the more likely it is to be of high quality, reliable, reproducible, and credible. We then explore legal issues that may be implicated in any effort to create special rules for science conducted specifically for a regulatory proceeding. Federal administrative law does not provide a basis for treating information in a given proceeding differently depending on its source or the reason for which it was generated. To the contrary, this law positively assures that interested persons have the right to offer their technical expertise toward the solution of regulatory problems. Any proposal to subject scientific information generated for the purpose of a regulatory proceeding to more demanding standards than other scientific information considered in that proceeding would clash with this law and would face significant administrative complexities. In a closely related example, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency considered but abandoned a program to implement standards aimed at "external" information.
本文源自一场会议,该会议提出了这样一个问题:“为在监管机构或法庭进行倡导目的而开展的科学工作,是否应与为其他目的开展的科学工作遵循相同的标准来评判?”在这篇聚焦于监管倡导背景的文章中,我们认为可以而且应该如此。首先,我们描述了一组当前用于评判科学研究与测试质量的标准和做法,并解释了这些标准和做法如何有助于评判研究与测试的质量,而不论开展这项工作的原因是什么。这些标准和做法包括联邦《信息质量法》、联邦《良好实验室规范》标准、同行评审、资金来源披露以及研究政策的透明度。科学信息越符合这些标准和做法,就越有可能具备高质量、可靠性、可重复性和可信度。然后,我们探讨了在为专门针对监管程序开展的科学工作制定特殊规则的任何努力中可能涉及的法律问题。联邦行政法并未提供依据,使在特定程序中的信息因其来源或产生原因而得到不同对待。相反,这部法律明确保障相关人员有权为解决监管问题提供其专业技术知识。任何提议,即让为监管程序目的而产生的科学信息比该程序中考虑的其他科学信息遵循更严格的标准,都将与这部法律相冲突,并将面临重大的行政复杂性。在一个密切相关的例子中,美国环境保护局曾考虑但放弃了一项实施针对“外部”信息的标准的计划。