Gøtzsche became the closest thing the world of statistical analysis had to a full-fledged celebrity. His findings were
trumpeted,
repeatedly, in The New York Times, with his mammography findings even making the front page in 2001. He became
the subject of a documentary and was
featured in at least one other. “The Daily Show” once had him play a kind of Big Pharma Deep Throat
in a segment on the opioid crisis. Viewed by many as a relentless fighter who has accused entire disciplines of nigh-irredeemable corruption, Gøtzsche’s crusades earned him the respect of powerful peers and a loyal following of layperson-skeptics around the world.
So it came as a surprise, at least to outsiders, when Gøtzsche was summarily expelled in fall of last year from the organization he helped found. He was voted off the board, then stripped of his position as director of the Nordic Cochrane Center, Cochrane’s Danish outpost. The stated reason for his termination was,
according to a statement from Cochrane’s governing board, “an ongoing, consistent pattern of disruptive and inappropriate behaviors,” along with a breach of the organization’s spokesperson policy, which requires collaborators to clearly identify whether they’re speaking on behalf of themselves or of Cochrane.