Defense
ploys in litigation per the Wall Street Journal
Court of Opinion Amid Suits Over Mold, Experts Wear Two
Hats
Authors of Science Paper Often Cited by Defense Also
Help in Litigation
By DAVID ARMSTRONG
January 9, 2007; Page A1
Wall Street Journal
Soon after
moving into a New York City apartment, Colin and Pamela
Fraser say, they began to suffer headaches, rashes,
respiratory infections and fatigue. They attributed it
to mold.
But
their lawsuit against the cooperative that owns the
building hit a roadblock when the court wouldn't let
their medical expert testify that mold caused their
problems. This is "unsupported by the scientific
literature," the state trial judge said.
She
relied in part on a position paper from the American
College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, or
ACOEM. Citing a substance some molds produce called
mycotoxins, the paper said "scientific evidence does not
support the proposition that human health has been
adversely affected by inhaled mycotoxins in the home,
school, or office environment."
The paper has become a key defense
tool wielded by builders, landlords and insurers in
litigation. It has also been used to assuage fears
of parents following discovery of mold in schools.
One point that rarely emerges in these cases: The
paper was written by people who regularly are paid
experts for the defense side in mold litigation.
The ACOEM doesn't disclose this,
nor did its paper. The professional society's
president, Tee Guidotti, says no disclosure is
needed because the paper represents the consensus of
its membership and is a statement from the society,
not the individual authors.
The dual roles show how conflicts
of interest can color debate on emerging health
issues and influence litigation related to it. Mold
has been a contentious matter since a Texas jury in
2001 awarded $32.1 million to a family whose home
was mold-infested. That award, later reduced, and a
couple of mold suits filed by famous people like Ed
McMahon and Erin Brockovich helped trigger a surge
in mold litigation. Insurers and builders worried it
would become a liability disaster for them on the
scale of asbestos.
The
number of suits hasn't been as big as anticipated. One
reason appears to be the insurers' success in getting
many states to exclude mold coverage from
homeowner's-insurance policies. But also helping turn
the tide, lawyers and doctors say, is the ACOEM report.
Building groups and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have
cited it to rebut the notion that mold in the home can
be toxic.
James
Craner, a Nevada doctor who has testified for scores of
people who claimed ill effects from mold, says the paper
"has been used in every single mold case. The lawyer
asks, 'Isn't it true the American College of
Occupational and Environmental Medicine concluded that
there is no scientific evidence that mold causes any
serious health effects?'"
The
result, Dr. Craner maintains, is that "a lot people with
legitimate environmental health problems are losing
their homes and their jobs because of legal decisions
based on this so-called 'evidence-based' statement."
Dr.
Craner says a majority of his work is on the plaintiff
side and he is paid when he testifies, but he says he
currently is an expert for the defense in a case where
he concluded the plaintiffs' health issues weren't
related to mold.
Two
other medical societies have also published statements
on mold written, in part, by legal-defense experts. The
societies didn't disclose this when they released the
papers, although one later published a correction saying
two authors served as expert witnesses in mold
litigation.
Mold reproduces through tiny
spores. These can float into homes through windows
and vent systems or be carried in on clothes or
shoes. Indoors, mold grows when moisture is present.
There's debate about how much this
matters. Plaintiffs attribute ills ranging from
asthma to cognitive problems to inhalation of mold.
The Institute of Medicine, a largely federally
funded nonprofit, reviewed the research in 2004 and
said "studies have demonstrated adverse effects --
including immunotoxic, neurologic, respiratory and
dermal responses -- after exposure to specific
toxins, bacteria, molds or their products." But it
added that the dose required to cause adverse health
effects hasn't been determined. The U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, for its part, says
on its Web site that mold can cause wheezing and eye
or skin irritation, but a link to more serious
conditions "has not been proven.
'Highly Unlikely'
The ACOEM paper goes further. It says not only is there
no evidence indoor mold causes serious health effects,
but even if mold produced toxic substances, it's "highly
unlikely at best" that anyone could inhale enough to
cause a problem. The paper reaches this conclusion by
extrapolating from animal studies in which rodents'
throats were injected with molds.
The
paper's authors say their conclusions are validated by
the Institute of Medicine's paper. But the author of the
Institute paper's mold toxicity chapter, Harriett Ammann,
disagrees, and criticizes the ACOEM paper's methodology:
"They took hypothetical exposure and hypothetical
toxicity and jumped to the conclusion there is nothing
there."
Dr.
Ammann, a recently retired toxicologist for Washington
state's health department, recently helped the plaintiff
side in a mold case. She says this was the only time she
has done so for pay. In the Fraser lawsuit in New York,
after the judge barred testimony that mold caused health
problems, Dr. Ammann, on her own and without pay,
provided an affidavit filed with the appellate court
saying the judge misinterpreted the research.
The
ACOEM, a society of more than 5,000 specialists who
investigate indoor health hazards and treat patients
with related illnesses, first moved to develop a
position paper on mold in early 2002. Dean Grove, then
the medical society's president, asked the head of its
council on scientific affairs, Yale medical professor
Jonathan Borak, to set the process in motion.
He
turned to a retired deputy director of the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health -- part of
the CDC -- to spearhead the project. Dr. Borak says he
wanted someone with "no established background record of
litigation related to mold."
For
the Defense
The
person he chose, Bryan Hardin, says he hadn't worked on
any mold lawsuit at that point, though he was a
consultant on other matters for GlobalTox Inc., a firm
that regularly worked for the defense in mold cases. And
Dr. Hardin says he consulted for the defense in a mold
case while he was helping write the ACOEM paper.
In a
Feb. 27, 2002, email, Dr. Borak told Dr. Hardin: "That
position paper would be prepared by you and your
GlobalTox colleagues." Dr. Borak says he believes he
didn't know at the time that GlobalTox did mold defense
work.
A
GlobalTox colleague who aided Dr. Hardin was Bruce
Kelman, now president of the firm, which recently
changed its name to Veritox Inc. Drs. Kelman and Hardin,
now principals at the firm and entitled to a share of
its profits, were two of the ACOEM paper's three
authors. They are paid $375 to $500 an hour for work on
mold cases, court records say.
EXPERT WITNESSES
• The Situation:
Mold defendants rely on medical-society position
papers that reject a link to serious ills, but
papers were written by scientists who often work
for defense side in mold cases.
• The Debate:
Whether courts get accurate or skewed view of
possible health effects of indoor mold.
• What's at Stake:
Outcome of widespread litigation over mold.
The paper's third author was Andrew Saxon, then
chief of clinical immunology and allergy at the
medical school of the University of California, Los
Angeles. He, too, has served as a defense expert in
numerous mold suits. Dr. Saxon says he is paid $510
an hour for his help. If called to testify in court,
his rate rises to $720 an hour, according to a
deposition he gave.
Until he retired from UCLA in September, money he
earned as a legal-defense expert was paid to the
university, and he says UCLA then gave him a little
less than half of it. Dr. Saxon estimates he
generates $250,000 to $500,000 a year from expert
defense work, which includes non-mold cases.
The ACOEM knew about mold defense work by the
authors of its paper. Dr. Hardin informed the
society in a Sept. 23, 2002, document under his
letterhead. Labeled "confidential" and "share only
with the ACOEM board of directors," it told of his
work as a defense expert on one mold case.
The
letter said the other two authors, Drs. Saxon and Kelman,
"have been retained by both the defense and plaintiff
bar in litigation relating to indoor mold." Both say
they work mostly for the defense in mold cases.
Internal ACOEM documents indicate that as the paper was
being written in August 2002, there was concern within
the society that the paper was too friendly to defense
interests. Its authors were asked to modify the first
draft's tone "because of the concern about possible
misinterpretation of 'buzz words' and phrases such as
'belief system,' 'adherents may claim,' 'supposed
hypersensitivity,' and 'alleged disorder,'" according to
a June 2002 email to Dr. Hardin from the society's
communications director. (The email was obtained by a
plaintiff's attorney in a mold case, Karen Kahn.)
Dr.
Borak, the head of the society's council on scientific
affairs, suggested sending a draft for review to one
particular mold authority, Michael Hodgson, director of
the occupational safety and health program at the U.S.
Veterans Health Administration. Dr. Hardin objected. He
said it would be "inappropriate to add ad hoc reviewers
who are highly visible advocates for a point of view the
draft position paper analyzes and finds lacking." The
draft ultimately wasn't sent.
'A
Defense Argument'
In September 2002, Dr. Borak emailed colleagues that "I
am having quite a challenge in finding an acceptable
path for the proposed position paper on mold." He said
several reviewers "find the current version, much
revised, to still be a defense argument."
The
society released a paper two months later, and its
authors, as well as ACOEM officials, say it accurately
reflects the science on indoor mold exposure. The
authors' "views, if prejudicial, were removed," Dr.
Borak says. "It went through a dramatic change of
top-heavy peer reviews." He says objections come mainly
from "activist litigants" who find it "annoying."
Drs.
Hardin and Kelman say the paper has been controversial
because it challenged "a belief system" that mold can be
toxic indoors. "A belief system is built up and there is
anger when the science doesn't support that belief
system," Dr. Kelman says.
The
Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, paid
Veritox $40,000 to prepare a lay version of the paper.
That version said "the notion that 'toxic mold' is an
insidious, secret 'killer,' as so many media reports and
trial lawyers would claim, is 'junk science' unsupported
by actual scientific study." Its authors were the three
writers of the longer paper plus a fourth, who also is a
principal at Veritox.
Lawyers
defending mold suits also cite a position paper from the
American Academy of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology. This
paper says it concurs with the ACOEM that it is highly
unlikely enough mycotoxins could be inhaled to lead to
toxic health effects.
Among
the academy paper's five authors is Dr. Saxon. Another,
Abba Terr, a San Francisco immunologist, has worked as a
defense expert in mold cases. The academy published the
paper in its Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology
last February, not citing the mold-defense work of
either man. The publication later ran a correction
disclosing their litigation work.
The
academy's president says officials were aware Dr. Saxon
was an expert witness. "We should have published their
[disclosure] statements with the paper," says the
official, Thomas Platts-Mills. He says the lapse
resulted from a variety of factors, including confusion
about whose responsibility the disclosure was.
Unhappy Author
A third
author of the academy's paper, Jay Portnoy, chief of
allergy, asthma and immunology at the Children's Mercy
Hospital in Kansas City, Mo., says he "felt that there
was an agenda" -- the effort "seemed very biased toward
denying the possibility of there being harmful effects
from mold on human health." He says he considered
removing his name from the paper, but it was published
before he could decide.
Dr.
Portnoy says a section he contributed was rewritten by
Dr. Saxon to be "a lot more negative." He says the paper
wrongly says mold isn't proven to cause allergic
rhinitis, with symptoms like wheezing, sore throat and
sneezing. Dr. Saxon denies the authors had a bias but
says they applied a high standard for proving mold
causes a particular effect. He says he didn't skew the
content of Dr. Portnoy's section but rewrote it because
it was "too diffuse." Dr. Terr in San Francisco didn't
return a call seeking comment.
In New
York, the Frasers are appealing the refusal of the trial
judge, state Supreme Court Justice Shirley Werner
Kornreich, to let their expert testify that indoor mold
caused their health complaints. The Frasers had moved
into the East Side Manhattan apartment in 1996. Their
2002 suit said they repeatedly complained to the co-op's
board of dampness and leaks as their health
deteriorated.
Their
appeal attacks the credibility of mold position papers
drafted by scientists who work for defendants. "What you
have here is defense experts authoring papers under an
official guise," says their attorney, Elizabeth Eilender.
Justice Kornreich declined to comment.
Write
to David Armstrong at
david.armstrong@wsj.com
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