AllTrials Campaign

Dear Cochrane Canada members and supporters,

I encourage you to read the email below from Ben Goldacre and Tracey Brown. It calls for your support of the AllTrials campaign. As Ben explains on the JustGiving website, he initiated the AllTrails campaign because half of all clinical trials have never been published. Researchers, patients and doctors need to know what was done and what they found, to make decisions about which treatment is best. Regulations are supposed to fix the problem of missing trials: they have been ignored. Voluntary "codes of conduct" are full of holes. Far too often research institutions and companies continue to withhold important information about treatments. A lack of public awareness has perpetuated the current situation - a public campaign will help change this.

The Cochrane Collaboration believes everyone has the same right to the best healthcare evidence and I am a personal supporter of this campaign.

Sincerely,
Jeremy Grimshaw
Director, Canadian Cochrane Centre

 

Dear Friend

You, and 40,000 other people around the world, have signed the AllTrials petition. We are on the threshold of significant change, but we now urgently need help from all of you to make this a reality.

Your support has already persuaded hundreds of organisations to commit to the aim of getting all clinical trials registered and their results reported. These include regulators and faculties. GSK, one of the biggest drug companies in the world, has signed up and others are considering it. Some of these groups are now starting discussions about the practical ways to stop trial results being withheld. 

So far we’ve created a ripple, and got some important commitments. We have empowered individuals in large organisations to speak up, and it has changed the mainstream opposition on this issue. In doing so, we have also challenged those who try to pretend that the problem doesn’t exist, or who falsely claim that it has already been fixed.

But this impetus for change could now go either way. Sir Iain Chalmers – co-founder of the Cochrane Collaboration - this week described on the MRC website how transparency has been mired in  25 years of false promises and failed initiatives. There are many who hope that AllTrials will fizzle out, and go away, as previous efforts have done. What happens next is up to all of us.

We need your help to grow internationally, and to push for a decisive and permanent change. This is what we want your help to achieve:

  • One million signatures on the petition. That number cannot be ignored. Ask 10 people you know to sign this week, put a link on your blog or your organisation’s website. With every 10,000 new signatures, we will send the petition to health ministers in every country and to regulators.
  • More international organisations signed up. It is vitally important that organisations take a stand on this issue and join the discussion about how to get all clinical trial results reported for all treatments in current use, not just those that may come along in the future. Some of you have already been very successful in persuading professional bodies, employers and other organisations to join. Can you write to medical organisations in your country
  • £40,000 so we can keep going. So far we have worked with almost no budget. At EvidenceLive last week we appealed for help and immediately received £6,000 of pledges, which is so welcome. We need funds to produce a website that keeps everyone updated on the campaign, to spread news and to organise events. We need the time to work with policy makers who are being aggressively briefed by organisations spending vast sums on lobbyists. Please donate whatever you can, even very small amounts make a difference: www.justgiving.com/alltrials, and let us know if there are other ways you can help raise funds.

If you have anything further to offer, please contact Síle Lane slane@senseaboutscience.org.

Thank you also for the material you have been sending us about the effects of secrecy and transparency. Over the coming weeks we’ll be making sure that the world hears a lot more about this issue.

Twenty five years of failure is too long. Doctors need all the results, of all the trials, on all the treatments we use today. With your help, we could now achieve this, together.

Best wishes

Ben and Tracey