Hi All:

It didn't seem to work when Nancy tried to paste it (or maybe she didn't want 
to blatantly violate copywrite ;-) so here it is:
but also note that the registration is free in the US; I don't know about the 
rest of the world....

By Jeff Gottlieb, Times Staff Writer

The medical study had profound implications, apparently offering scientific 
proof of the power of prayer, even the existence of God. 

The article, with two Columbia University physicians listed as authors, said 
that women undergoing in vitro fertilization treatments in South Korea were 
twice as likely to conceive when strangers prayed for them. Making the 
findings even more spectacular was that the women didn't even know they were 
being prayed for.

The doctor identified as the lead researcher told the New York Times that he 
and his colleagues found the results so improbable that they debated whether 
to publish them. 

But questions about the study began soon after its publication in the 
September 2001 issue of the Journal of Reproductive Medicine. Several 
researchers, led by Dr. Bruce Flamm, an obstetrician-gynecologist at Kaiser 
Permanente in Riverside and a clinical professor at UC Irvine Medical School, 
questioned the study's methodology.

He found it so complicated as to be almost unexplainable. And the authors said 
several times that the women didn't know they were in an experiment, 
considered a serious ethical breach. Flamm wrote critical letters and e-mails 
to the journal's editors and the scientists. He called. He left messages. And 
for nearly three years, he has been ignored.

Then something happened that attracted attention to the study once more. The 
third researcher on the prayer study, Daniel Wirth, pleaded guilty in 
Pennsylvania to federal charges of embezzling $2 million from Adelphia 
Communications by submitting fictitious invoices for consulting services. 
Indicted on charges that included using false identifies for decades, Wirth 
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail fraud, bank fraud and money 
laundering.

Even though the journal identified Wirth as a lawyer, critics knew him for his 
articles on psychic healing in less scholarly journals, including a study 
claiming prayer had helped salamanders regenerate limbs.

Wirth, who is listed on the study as "Dr. Wirth" � apparently in reference to 
his juris doctor degree � also has a master's degree in parapsychology from 
John F. Kennedy University in Orinda in the Bay Area. 

Flamm's concerns about the prayer study's credibility, detailed in an article 
he wrote that will be published this week in the magazine Skeptical Inquirer, 
started to gain recognition with the spreading news of the indictment. "I had 
no idea this guy was going to do me the favor of getting arrested ," Flamm 
said.

Questions remain.

Why have the journal and the authors ignored Flamm's questions, especially 
because scientific journals typically provide a forum for debate by printing 
critical letters along with the authors' responses? How did two professors 
from Columbia University Medical Center get mixed up with Wirth? How did such 
a seemingly questionable study pass the peer review process at the Journal? 

The journal recently took the prayer study off its website � not as a 
retraction, but because the publication was receiving so much "traffic" over 
the article that its small staff couldn't keep up, said Dr. Lawrence Devoe, 
the journal's current editor.

Devoe said he was going through mail generated by the prayer study and would 
send it to the authors for their response. "It will take some time," he said. 

Marilyn Castaldi, a spokeswoman for Columbia's medical center, said a six-
member faculty committee began an inquiry last month. 

Dr. Rogerio Lobo, one of the study's authors and then-chairman of obstetrics 
and gynecology at Columbia's College of Physicians & Surgeons, said the 
authors stood by the study. "Oh, my God," said Lobo, who promoted the story in 
the national media. "Why won't this stuff just go away?"

The other author, Dr. Kwang Y. Cha, a professor in South Korea who was working 
with Lobo during a yearlong sabbatical, did not return calls seeking comment. 
He is medical director of the Cha Fertility Clinic in Los Angeles. 

Wirth's attorney said he had advised his client not to comment. 

The study said that women undergoing in vitro fertilization, where the egg is 
fertilized outside the body and implanted in the womb, had a 50% pregnancy 
rate when people were praying for them, compared with a 26% pregnancy rate for 
women who had no one praying for them. The women underwent the procedure in a 
Seoul hospital.

Christians in the U.S., Canada and Australia were faxed unidentified 
photographs of the women and asked to pray that "God's will or desire be 
fulfilled."

Some Christian groups embraced the study, celebrating the fact that one of the 
most prestigious medical schools in the country was alleging scientific proof 
that prayer works. Scientists, by implication, were saying that God existed.

Flamm noticed the study when a nurse dropped a copy of the Journal on his desk.

"The first thing I noticed was [that] it made an apparently miraculous claim," 
he said. "I'm not accustomed in my medical career to seeing a miracle cure." 

Flamm, who attended UC Riverside as an undergraduate and received his medical 
degree from Wake Forest University, will not divulge his religion, if he has 
one, saying it shouldn't make a difference. "Religions base things on faith," 
he said. "A scientist should look at things scientifically, based on the 
merits."

He also found problems with the study's scientific design and had other 
questions. If prayer were so powerful, why did the women need to use in vitro 
fertilization? Why were the prayers to a Christian God? What about Buddhists, 
Jews, Muslims and others? And was God punishing the women who didn't get 
pregnant? 

Flamm sent his criticisms to journal editor Dr. George Wied. Wied died last 
month. He assumed that the Journal of Reproductive Medicine would address his 
concerns by printing his letter and the authors' response. But Flamm's letters 
were never printed. 

Flamm spoke in early 2002 to the journal's managing editor, Donna Kessel. He 
said Kessel told him that she was aware of his concerns but that "we don't 
want to add fuel to the flames. We won't publish anything else," and hung up.

Kessel did not return calls last week.

Wirth faces the possibility of a maximum sentence of five years. Sentencing is 
scheduled for Sept. 14.


Quoting Rick Adams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> Hi Nancy,
>  
> The article is available only to registered users on the site. Can you
> give us a summary?
>  
> Rick

> Rick Adams
> Capella University, Graduate School of Technology
> Grand Canyon University, School of Social Sciences
> Jackson Community College, Department of social Sciences
> 
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 
> "... and the only measure of your worth and your deeds will be the love
> you leave behind when you're gone." 
> -Fred Small, J.D., "Everything Possible"

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Department of Psychology
University of San Diego 
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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