Academics slam the Mayo Clinic for suspending doctor who criticized NIH’s handling of Covid pandemic

More like the Mao Clinic! Academics slam the Mayo Clinic for censoring and suspending doctor who criticized Government’s handling of Covid pandemic

  • 29 Ivy League professors have written a letter in protest of a doctor’s suspension
  • Professor Michael Joyner was suspended in March for comments made to CNN
  • READ MORE: The real patient zero?

Professor Michael Joyner was suspended 

Almost 30 professors from Ivy League universities wrote a letter to the Mayo Clinic to protest the suspension of a doctor after he openly criticized the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Professor Michael Joyner, a professor of anesthesiology and physician-research in exercise, has been at the Mayo Clinic for nearly 63 years.

His colleagues from Harvard, Yale, Columbia and other universities wrote: ‘Placing academic freedom in jeopardy is certain to tarnish Mayo’s reputation among the many who have always thought of Mayo as a beacon of scientific integrity.’

Dr Joyner is the lead investigator in a government-funded study on convalescent plasma treatments for Covid and sports performance.

In January, Dr Joyner said in a CNN article that he was ‘frustrated’ with the NIH’s ‘bureaucratic rope-a-dope,’ and labeled the agency’s guidelines a ‘wet blanket’ that put doctors off trying the treatment on people.

Two months later on March 5, the Mayo Clinic suspended Dr Joyner for a week without pay.

In a letter, it told him to ‘discuss approved topics only’ with reporters and to ‘stick to prescribed messaging.’

He was warned that ‘behavior changes must be immediate and sustained’ and if he did not, he would be fired.

‘Validated complaints’ from staff would also result in Dr Joyner losing his job, the Mayo Clinic said, even if they were unrelated to the other issues.

Dr Carlos Mantilla, department chair of anesthesiology and perioperative medicine

Dr Carlos Mantilla, department chair of anesthesiology and perioperative medicine

The letter, signed by Dr Carlos Mantilla, department chair of anesthesiology and perioperative medicine at the Mayo Clinic, said Dr Joyner ‘failed to communicate in accordance with prescribed messaging.’ 

This ‘reflect[ed] poorly on Mayo Clinic’s brand and reputation’ and ’caused the institution to question whether … [he is] able to appropriately represent Mayo Clinic in media interactions.’ 

The protest letter said that ‘in persecuting one of its most senior and valuable professors, Mayo is sending a terrible message not only to its other faculty, but also to other institutions in academic medicine.’

Dr Nicholas Christakis, a physician and professor at Yale University who signed the letter, tweeted: ‘Mayo should be ashamed. How can anyone know whether the doctors there are actually saying what they believe, now?’

He added: ‘This is 1984-level doublespeak.’

Andrea Kalmanovitz, a Mayo Clinic spokesperson, said in a statement to CNN: ‘Mayo disciplined Dr Joyner for treating coworkers disrespectfully and for making unprofessional comments about the NIH’s regulation of convalescent plasma.’

It added: ‘The Mayo Clinic supports academic freedom, as evidenced by the hundreds of interviews Mayo physicians, including Dr Joyner, give each year.’

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Read more at DailyMail.co.uk