1
395 Commentary from Westminster Priorities in Medical Research EVEN Labour MPs, who belong to a party pledged to sweep away the undemocratic structure of the House of Lords, can sometimes be persuaded to cough out the occasional word of qualified praise for some aspects of the institution. That peers owe their places either to inheritance or to selection remains, for them, insuperably unacceptable. But that the non-elected chamber can sometimes command an expertise which the elected chamber cannot is, here and there, candidly admitted. This superior expertise is nowhere more evident than when you compare the select committee systems of the two houses. Some members of Commons select committees, starting virtually from scratch, become considerable experts in the fields to which they are assigned. But the all too frequent story with Commons select committees is that one or two members come to dominate the proceedings, ask most of the really telling questions, and shape the eventual report, and that far too much of the committee’s effectiveness depends in the end on the talent and ingenuity of the committee’s clerk and its outside advisers. The Lords, in contrast, time and again summon to select committee membership people who know the world they are exploring quite as well as do the witnesses they call before them. The critical findings of a Lords select committee may still be dismissed by Ministers with lightly veiled contempt, or even virtually ignored. But the criticism stings, even so. So the opening of an inquiry by a sub-committee of the Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology into priorities in medical research could turn out to mean rather more than initial coverage (of which there was hardly any) might suggest. It will be able to build both on the report of the full committee on Civil Research and Development, whose implications for medicine were noted in this column,l and on the near-consensus of apprehension and alarm (Baroness Trumpington excepted) which surfaced in a Lords debate on academic medicine on Nov 26.2 Four peers who took part in the research and development inquiry will also engage in this one: Lord Sherfield, who chaired that inquiry; the medical peer, Lord Hunter of Newington, a former Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham ; the physicist and former Rector of Imperial College, Lord Flowers; and the physiologist, Lord Adrian.3 Lord Hunter also took part in the Nov 26 debate. The sub-committee seems destined to spend a lot of its time exploring a theme which cropped up repeatedly in the evidence of the MRC to the research and development inquiry. This is the danger that in straitened times research is becoming more and more dominated by short-termism (a condition which in other contexts Ministers keep asking us to avoid). That means too much soft money tied to too many transient jobs, and too much emphasis on work which, while it may produce a quick, localised pay-off, will make little enduring contribution to the science base. Industrial and charitable funding, increasingly crucial as official sources 1. McKie D. The economic and social benefits of science. Lancet 1987; i: 174. 2. McKie D. The decline of academic medicine. Lancet 1986; ii: 1345. 3. The subcommittee’s members are: Lord Nelson of Stafford (chairman), Lord Adrian, Lord Erroll of Hale, Lord Flowers, Lord Hunter of Newmgton, Lord Kearton, Lady Lockwood, Lord Perry of Walton, Lord Sherfield, Lord Taylor of Blackburn. falter, pours in for research into heart disease and cancer, but is hard to find support for work on mental handicap or psychiatric medicine, or for the sort of project which may take ten years to produce exploitable results-and which may even, if things go wrong, have little to show at the end of it. (Who now, one despairing observer asked last week, would rush forward to fund, say, the search for the secrets of DNA?) As the retiring MRC secretary, Sir James Gowans, told the Science and Technology Committee, funding from outside sources must always be complementary to Government provision through the universities, the DHSS, and the MRC, and not a substitute for it. The crisis in medical education, and its specific implications for research, which Baroness Trumpington seemed ready to dismiss in the Nov 26 debate as comfortably under control, was specifically recognised by the Education Secretary, Mr Kenneth Baker, in this year’s dispensations on university pay. In a message to the chairman of the University Grants Committee, Sir Peter Swinnerton-Dyer, he listed medical education as one of the particular areas for which he wanted the UGC to make provision, and about which you could expect him to have further instructive chats with his friend the Social Services Secretary, Mr Norman Fowler. But gratitude for that is bound to be tempered by the fact that Mr Baker’s decisions on fundings, announced in the Commons on Jan 23, fall far short of what the universities had regarded even as a decent minimum. He was asked for k 110 million to fund a C 170 million package agreed last autumn, but could offer only £ 71 million, conditional on efficiency measures. This is all the more ominous when two universities, Bristol and Leeds, have been driven to threaten that, with so little money available, the commitment to keep the salaries of academic clinical staff in line with those of their NHS colleagues might have to be abandoned. If parity goes, the trickle away from academic medicine to more lucrative comparable employment is predicted to become a flood. Such threats at such times are of course familiar. They might be dismissed as tactical frighteners (and the threat at Bristol was subsequently withdrawn). But in areas of continuing decline, this year’s frighteners have a nasty habit of becoming next year’s realities. It would no doubt be stretching the committee’s terms of reference if it began to take up every prevalent dissatisfaction with the funding of medical education. But with so many former Chancellors and vice-Chancellors and even deputy Pro-Chancellors in the group, there will be plenty of scope for informal agonising over, for instance, the rights and wrongs of the University Grants Committee’s new and allegedly more rational system of awards, picking out successful departments to be rewarded, while classifying others as substandard and therefore to be penalised. The UGC, anyway, could be heading for a radical transformation even while the subcommittee is at work. There were reports last week that the Government would like it to contain rather fewer academics and rather more outsiders, especially from industry. That would no doubt raise a howl of protest from universities alarmed at the prospect of having their financial fates decided by people who do not intimately know their ways. Some struggling departments, though, might just suspect that a beefed-up UGC might have more success in wringing money out of Government than a clutch of academics who can too easily be dismissed as skilled special pleaders. DAVID MCKIE

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Page 1: Priorities in Medical Research

395

Commentary from Westminster

Priorities in Medical Research

EVEN Labour MPs, who belong to a party pledged tosweep away the undemocratic structure of the House of

Lords, can sometimes be persuaded to cough out theoccasional word of qualified praise for some aspects of theinstitution. That peers owe their places either to inheritanceor to selection remains, for them, insuperably unacceptable.But that the non-elected chamber can sometimes commandan expertise which the elected chamber cannot is, here andthere, candidly admitted. This superior expertise is nowheremore evident than when you compare the select committee

systems of the two houses. Some members of Commonsselect committees, starting virtually from scratch, becomeconsiderable experts in the fields to which they are assigned.But the all too frequent story with Commons selectcommittees is that one or two members come to dominatethe proceedings, ask most of the really telling questions, andshape the eventual report, and that far too much of thecommittee’s effectiveness depends in the end on the talentand ingenuity of the committee’s clerk and its outsideadvisers. The Lords, in contrast, time and again summon toselect committee membership people who know the worldthey are exploring quite as well as do the witnesses they callbefore them. The critical findings of a Lords selectcommittee may still be dismissed by Ministers with lightlyveiled contempt, or even virtually ignored. But the criticismstings, even so.

So the opening of an inquiry by a sub-committee of theLords Select Committee on Science and Technology intopriorities in medical research could turn out to mean rathermore than initial coverage (of which there was hardly any)might suggest. It will be able to build both on the report ofthe full committee on Civil Research and Development,whose implications for medicine were noted in this column,land on the near-consensus of apprehension and alarm(Baroness Trumpington excepted) which surfaced in aLords debate on academic medicine on Nov 26.2 Four peerswho took part in the research and development inquiry willalso engage in this one: Lord Sherfield, who chaired thatinquiry; the medical peer, Lord Hunter of Newington, aformer Vice-Chancellor of Birmingham ; the physicist andformer Rector of Imperial College, Lord Flowers; and thephysiologist, Lord Adrian.3 Lord Hunter also took part inthe Nov 26 debate.

The sub-committee seems destined to spend a lot of itstime exploring a theme which cropped up repeatedly in theevidence of the MRC to the research and developmentinquiry. This is the danger that in straitened times researchis becoming more and more dominated by short-termism (acondition which in other contexts Ministers keep asking usto avoid). That means too much soft money tied to too manytransient jobs, and too much emphasis on work which, whileit may produce a quick, localised pay-off, will make littleenduring contribution to the science base. Industrial andcharitable funding, increasingly crucial as official sources

1. McKie D. The economic and social benefits of science. Lancet 1987; i: 174.2. McKie D. The decline of academic medicine. Lancet 1986; ii: 1345.3. The subcommittee’s members are: Lord Nelson of Stafford (chairman), Lord Adrian,

Lord Erroll of Hale, Lord Flowers, Lord Hunter of Newmgton, Lord Kearton,Lady Lockwood, Lord Perry of Walton, Lord Sherfield, Lord Taylor ofBlackburn.

falter, pours in for research into heart disease and cancer, butis hard to find support for work on mental handicap orpsychiatric medicine, or for the sort of project which maytake ten years to produce exploitable results-and whichmay even, if things go wrong, have little to show at the end ofit. (Who now, one despairing observer asked last week,would rush forward to fund, say, the search for the secrets ofDNA?) As the retiring MRC secretary, Sir James Gowans,told the Science and Technology Committee, funding fromoutside sources must always be complementary to

Government provision through the universities, the DHSS,and the MRC, and not a substitute for it.The crisis in medical education, and its specific

implications for research, which Baroness Trumpingtonseemed ready to dismiss in the Nov 26 debate as comfortablyunder control, was specifically recognised by the EducationSecretary, Mr Kenneth Baker, in this year’s dispensationson university pay. In a message to the chairman of theUniversity Grants Committee, Sir Peter Swinnerton-Dyer,he listed medical education as one of the particular areas forwhich he wanted the UGC to make provision, and aboutwhich you could expect him to have further instructive chatswith his friend the Social Services Secretary, Mr NormanFowler. But gratitude for that is bound to be tempered bythe fact that Mr Baker’s decisions on fundings, announcedin the Commons on Jan 23, fall far short of what theuniversities had regarded even as a decent minimum. Hewas asked for k 110 million to fund a C 170 million packageagreed last autumn, but could offer only £ 71 million,conditional on efficiency measures. This is all the moreominous when two universities, Bristol and Leeds, havebeen driven to threaten that, with so little money available,the commitment to keep the salaries of academic clinical staffin line with those of their NHS colleagues might have to beabandoned. If parity goes, the trickle away from academicmedicine to more lucrative comparable employment is

predicted to become a flood. Such threats at such times areof course familiar. They might be dismissed as tacticalfrighteners (and the threat at Bristol was subsequentlywithdrawn). But in areas of continuing decline, this year’sfrighteners have a nasty habit of becoming next year’srealities.

It would no doubt be stretching the committee’s terms ofreference if it began to take up every prevalent dissatisfactionwith the funding of medical education. But with so manyformer Chancellors and vice-Chancellors and even deputyPro-Chancellors in the group, there will be plenty of scopefor informal agonising over, for instance, the rights andwrongs of the University Grants Committee’s new andallegedly more rational system of awards, picking outsuccessful departments to be rewarded, while classifyingothers as substandard and therefore to be penalised. TheUGC, anyway, could be heading for a radicaltransformation even while the subcommittee is at work.There were reports last week that the Government wouldlike it to contain rather fewer academics and rather more

outsiders, especially from industry. That would no doubtraise a howl of protest from universities alarmed at the

prospect of having their financial fates decided by peoplewho do not intimately know their ways. Some strugglingdepartments, though, might just suspect that a beefed-upUGC might have more success in wringing money out ofGovernment than a clutch of academics who can too easilybe dismissed as skilled special pleaders.

DAVID MCKIE