JAMA Calls for Papers of Climate Change Harm

News Brief by Kip Hansen

 

featiured_image_JAMAJAMA Network Open,  an online open-access journal of the American Medical Association,  has published  “Climate Change and Health —  Call for Papers” from authors  Drs. Frederick P. Rivara and Stephan D. Fihn, Editor and Deputy Editor of JAMA Network Open.  It is a good thing that they have published it as an Editorial.

This “Call for Papers” is a prime example of what leads to bias in scientific (and medical) journals.   Rivara and Fihn, the editors of JAMA Network Open, expressly call for papers that will show harms from future climate change. No pretense is made to call for papers that will discuss the possible benefits or harms of future climate change — only harms.

After what appears to be a fair and sensible  (if unsurprisingly already biased)  lede:

“The scientific community widely agrees that climate change is occurring due to the increase in greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities.  These changes are likely to have profound implications in a range of human experiences worldwide.  As a global open access health journal, JAMA Network Open is issuing a call for papers on the health outcomes and risks associated with climate change.  [ footnote reference numbers deleted –kh ]

the authors out their true objectives by then writing:

We are interested in reports of original research on the associations of heat with the health of humans and their potential adaptations to global warming.  Air pollution is a critically important topic because it is associated with increases in the risk of cardiovascular disease, impaired lung function,,  allergies and asthma, altered thyroid function,  food insecurity and malnutrition, and forced migration. The increasing incidence of wildfires further lessens air quality and has immediate and long-term effects on humans and other organisms. We are also interested in studies on changes in the incidence of infectious diseases, including vector-borne and food-borne illnesses, occurring as a result of changes in a region’s temperature, biome, and capacity to combat these illnesses.

Climate change may also be associated with risks to mental health, including increased stress, anxiety, and depression. As extreme weather occurs with greater frequency, threats to health are associated with the traumas of natural disasters, which bring loss of life and the destruction of community infrastructure.  These studies are thus critically important to fully understand the magnitude and breadth of the health consequences of environmental changes. Climate change may also impact a community’s ability to support and develop health-promoting resources, such as green space, which has been shown to be associated with improvements in mental health.

JAMA Network Open is particularly interested in examining how climate change affects people most susceptible to environmental degradation: people at the extremes of age, those with chronic illness, those performing physical work in the heat, and those living with homelessness, poverty, food insecurity, and discrimination.”

That is certainly a fine list of Climate Catastrophe topics,   mostly imaginary  [ht — by analogy — Douglas Adams  ] .   They will view as “favorable” any submitted paper that is pre-conceived to show that Climate Change will be bad for humans — or agriculture, the atmosphere, animals, environments … make your own list — and especially for the disadvantaged: old people, very young people, chronically ill people, people who have to work (outside), the homeless, poor, hungry and with identities that sufferdiscrimination” (used in its special Identity Politics definition).

Better hurry though:   get your grant requests in quickly because  “Manuscripts should be submitted by March 1, 2020.”

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Author’s Comment:

This solicitation for papers is one of the many reasons that scientific journals have been found to contain an endless supply of research that is often not only biased but just plain wrong.   A journal soliciting papers specifically to represent only one side of a science controversy is, in my opinion,  simply unscientific and violates the very premise of a scientific or medical journal.

JAMA Network Open would have been fully justified to call for papers on the future health and environmental health implications of possible climate change futures.  Sensible voices have been pointing out for years that cold places will benefit from longer growing seasons, less stress and death from cold temperatures and that hot places will see little, if any, warming.  The “spread of tropical diseases” concept is well-known to be a false issue from the start [ see here and here ].

As John P. A. Ioannidis has pointed out, time and time again, for many current scientific fields, claimed research findings may often be simply accurate measures of the prevailing bias.”

This essay covers one of the reasons that Ioannidis gets that right.

Begin your comments with “Kip…” if you would like a reply.

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BoyfromTottenham
September 14, 2019 7:15 pm

How about sending them a paper on the increasing occurrence of psychotic delusions among a wide swath of ‘scientists’ in western countries?

DaveW
September 14, 2019 8:28 pm

Dear Drs Frederick P. Rivara and Stephan D. Fihn, JAMA Network Open:

I would be pleased if you would consider the following paper for publication in Climate Change and Health:

Doubleyu, D.(1) Increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and the climate crisis are directly correlated with assault weapons sales in the United States.

Abstract: Assault weapons kill more Americans annually than poisonous snakes. The Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act was signed into law by President William Jefferson Clinton in 1994 and made illegal the manufacture and civilian use of semi-automatic assault weapons for 10 years. Unfortunately, although assault weapons were less likely to be used, violent gun crime failed to decrease over the decade and the use of assault weapons in Hollywood movies actually increased. In 2004 assault weapons sales to individuals again became legal and since then the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide has increased from 380 to 414 ppb. We present a model demonstrating how a ban on the sale and possession of assault weapons will eliminate the correlation between atmospheric carbon and assault weapon sales.

(1) Director, International Centre for Climate Alarm & Armaments, The Hague

n.n
September 14, 2019 8:41 pm

This is a legal alert… we are seeking witches to prop a consensus, and using empathy to pass warlock judgments for Profits.

leitmotif
September 15, 2019 1:12 am

Carbonophobia – Fear of the sixth element.

Rod Evans
Reply to  leitmotif
September 15, 2019 1:40 am

Someone that denies CO2 is good for life is an oxymoron…

Rod Evans
September 15, 2019 1:31 am

“The scientific community widely agrees that climate change is occurring due to the increase in greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels and other human activities”.
Well you can’t say they don’t start from preconceived ideas. The fact even their preconceived idea is flawed doesn’t embarrass them.
Now, had they opened their call for papers with the term “environmental change” replacing climate change they might have been on to something worth progressing.
The greening of the planet, thanks to the release of CO2 over the past 75 years seems to be recognised by the scientific community, at long last.
The correlation between the increased green plant growth rates and the growth in urbanisation living, (where there are no lawns to mow or hedges to trim) is positive. Clear evidence of the effect on the environment of burning fossil fuel…. 🙂

Ewin Barnett
September 15, 2019 3:09 am

Not so much a call for more papers of a scientific nature as it is a call for scientific themed papers that are really thinly disguised justifications to impose socialism.

ozspeaksup
September 15, 2019 4:58 am

same setup as the IPCC -ONLY manmade supposed co2 harm to be looked at .
hardly open fair or scientifically based is it?

Roger Knights
September 15, 2019 7:23 am

If the organization’s publication’s name began, as some do (I suspect), with “Proceedings and Journal,” it would go by a nifty acronym: PAJAMA.

Mike Sherman
September 15, 2019 8:14 am

I suggest that the medical journals need to concentrate on medical mistakes, the number three killer after heart disease and cancer instead of jousting with windmills.

Reply to  Kip Hansen
September 17, 2019 9:27 am

Um, maybe so to an extent, in public; yet examples do get made, or did. As they say, YMMV. I say YMWV.

Now contrast the number of medical malpractice lawsuits with the number of legal ones.

September 15, 2019 9:13 am

My proposal, “The impact on Health by the Unreliability of Renewable Energy.”

James Clarke
September 15, 2019 9:48 am

Kip, you wrote: “A journal soliciting papers specifically to represent only one side of a science controversy is, in my opinion, simply unscientific…”

Is this only an opinion, or is it universally true that choosing to ignore half of the scientific data and results is unscientific, and not a matter of opinion?

I acknowledge that scientists can specialize in their field of study to the point that they are only studying one aspect of one side of a controversy, but that is not the same as intentionally ignoring evidence and results.

John Q Public
September 15, 2019 10:44 am

WUWT calls for papers on benefits to man, nature and the environment due to increased in OCO?

MarkW
September 15, 2019 1:49 pm

“A journal soliciting papers specifically to represent only one side of a science controversy is, in my opinion, simply unscientific and violates the very premise of a scientific or medical journal.”

Next year, when JAMA is full of papers claiming all kinds of negative consequences, the usual suspects will start proclaiming that this proves that only harm will come from global warming.