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After complaints, National Institutes of Health launches review of Havana Syndrome study

Nora Gamez Torres, Miami Herald on

Published in News & Features

A review board at the National Institutes of Health is conducting an internal investigation of a study about Havana Syndrome that did not find brain damage in patients, following complaints from participants and questions from Congress about newly reported information suggesting Russia might be behind directed energy attacks against U.S. officials.

The research, conducted between June 2018 and November 2022, examined former and active U.S. officials injured in mysterious incidents around the world associated with a cluster of symptoms known as Havana Syndrome. U.S. officials earlier suspected Russia was the culprit, but in March 2023 the U.S. intelligence community released an assessment concluding that it was unlikely that a foreign adversary was behind a global campaign of attacks against the U.S.

Earlier papers published by teams of doctors treating some of these patients soon after they started feeling sick found they had injuries in the brain and inner-ear damage.

However, the NIH researchers said that they could find no evidence of brain injury after studying the patients’ MRIs and blood work, results they published in two articles in the Journal of the American Medical Association in March.

That didn’t settle the debate about the “anomalous health incidents,” the government’s term for Havana Syndrome. Scientists involved in other research projects about Havana Syndrome immediately questioned those results, pointing to flaws in the new study’s methodology and sample of patients.

Some participants also accused NIH officials and researchers involved in the study of bias, misreporting the data about brain injuries under pressure from the CIA and improperly sharing confidential medical information, according to a formal complaint sent to the NIH and its Institutional Review Board before the results went public. The complaint, first reported by the Miami Herald, also said patients were coerced into taking part in the study and were told they couldn’t get treatment elsewhere if they refused.

 

The NIH Institutes went ahead with the publication of the articles, but last week Nicole Grant, chair of the Institutional Review Board, emailed participants to acknowledge the complaint and ask them to fill out a form with more information.

“We have received a complaint about a study conducted by our researchers,” Grant wrote. “We would like to learn if you have any concerns.”

The questions included in the form ask participants if they felt “pressured” about joining or remaining in the study; if they were led to believe that participation was required to be able to receive medical care at another medical facility, and if they believed that medical information collected during the study that would identify them was shared with others without their permission.

“Were you ever told or given the impression that your symptoms would not be accurately recorded by the NIH staff who were evaluating you?” another question asked participants.

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