2 Nobel judges to be dismissed over stem-cell doctor scandal | Inquirer News

2 Nobel judges to be dismissed over stem-cell doctor scandal

/ 06:56 PM September 06, 2016

FILE - In this Friday, July 30, 2010 file photo, Dr. Paolo Macchiarini talks to journalists during a press conference, in Florence, Italy. An independent commission investigating Italian stem cell scientist Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, whose work was once considered revolutionary, says that there were numerous problems in how he treated patients and that the scientific basis for his work was “inadequate, " it was reported on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2016. Macchiarini was part of the team that conducted the world’s first transplant using a windpipe partly made from a patient’s own stem cells. (AP Photo/Lorenzo Galassi, File)

FILE – In this Friday, July 30, 2010 file photo, Dr. Paolo Macchiarini talks to journalists during a press conference, in Florence, Italy. An independent commission investigating Italian stem cell scientist Dr. Paolo Macchiarini, whose work was once considered revolutionary, says that there were numerous problems in how he treated patients and that the scientific basis for his work was “inadequate, ” it was reported on Wednesday, Aug. 31, 2016. (AP Photo/Lorenzo Galassi, File

STOCKHOLM — The panel that awards the Nobel Prize in medicine is dismissing two judges for their roles in a scandal over a disgraced stem cell scientist at Stockholm’s Karolinska Institute.

Nobel Assembly secretary Thomas Perlmann told Swedish news agency TT on Tuesday that Harriet Wallberg and Anders Hamsten would be asked to leave the 50-member group, which will announce the annual award next month.

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Wallberg and Hamsten have already left high-ranking jobs at Karolinska amid scathing criticism of how the institute handled allegations of scientific misconduct against stem-cell scientist Dr. Paolo Macchiarini.

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Once considered a pioneer in windpipe transplants, Macchiarini was fired after being accused of falsifying his resume and misrepresenting his work.

Prosecutors are investigating him for involuntary manslaughter in connection with two patients who died. He disputes all charges.

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TAGS: News, Nobel Prize, world

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