I think the problem is the student didn't use science. It was poorly designed. That seems to be a common problem is that there is lack of attention to methodology to the extent that a lot of time and money are wasted on useless studies that really should be thrown out.
That is why some publications will no longer accept studies funded in full or partially from tobacco companies; they were poorly designed, lacked thourgh methodoly which resulted in hidden bias and were not applicable. However I don't see that as a finger pointing at just tobacco funded studies,
but all fingers should be pointed at most industry funded studies. I have seen examples were 3/4 of medical studies from the US were thrown out due to poor design by large reviews. The US used to be the leader in medical science 20 years ago.
So in my mind, patting this student on the back for a poorly designed and executed study was boaderline criminal in it's attempt to decieve and mislead that this had value. There is little understanding of science for just this type of shennanigans. Someday, maybe, they will extend fraud to include such studies. One can only hope.
This might be entertaining;
http://tobaccoanalysis.blogspot.com/2014/04/anti-smoking-groups-and-policy-makers.html
You do realize that Gantz is an engineer and not a scientist or doctor. Very few in the FDA / CDC have any scientific background.