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Ethical publishing by doing the right things Moderated by Mirjam Curno Presented by Thomas Babor and Joseph Amon

Ethical publishing by doing the right things

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Ethical publishing by doing the right things. Moderated by Mirjam Curno Presented by Thomas Babor and Joseph Amon. What is right and what is wrong. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Ethical publishing by doing the right things

Moderated by Mirjam CurnoPresented by Thomas Babor and Joseph Amon

Page 2: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

What is right and what is wrong

• “It is not cruel to inflict on a few criminals sufferings which may benefit multitudes of innocent people through all centuries." (1st Century physician Celsius)

• “The study was approved by the Makerere University Faculty of Medicine Research and Ethics committee,” “Parents of all children provided written informed consent and children over eight years also provided assent.” (JIAS Pilyoya et al. 2012)

Page 3: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things
Page 4: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Who is responisble?• Researchers • Ethics Review Boards • Reviewers • Editors • Funding bodies • National laws • Human rights

Page 5: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things
Page 6: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Safeguarding the literature

Page 7: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things
Page 8: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

The Seven Deadly Sins in Scientific

Publishing and How to Avoid Them

Thomas BaborUniversity of Connecticut

School of Medicine

Page 9: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Why Ethical Issues are Important

Rates of detection are low but violations, especially less serious infractions, are considered prevalent

Compliance review and other ethical requirements are increasing (e.g., human subjects committees)

Ethical violations affect the quality and integrity of science

Page 10: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Ethical Issues: Authors’ Seven Deadly Sins

Sin Examples Punishments

1 Carelessness Citation bias, understatement, negligence

Request for correction, letter to editor

2 Redundant publication

Same tables or literature review reported without noting prior source

Rejection of manuscript. Copyright infringement

3 Unfair authorship Failure to include eligible authors, Honorary authors

Angry colleagues, complaints to editor or employer

4 Undeclared Conflict of Interest

Failure to cite funding source Letter to editor, public apology

5 Human/animal subjects violations

No approval from Review Board or Ethics Committee

Rejection of manuscript &notification of employer

6 Plagiarism Reproducing others’ work or ideas without as one’s own

Retraction of manuscript &notification of employer

7 Other Fraud Fabrication of falsification of data, Misappropriation of others ideas or plans given in confidence

Retraction of manuscript, notification of employer & publication ban

Page 11: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

The Seven Deadly Sins: Journal Author Declarations

Authorship Statement – Declaration of substantive contribution signed by all authors

Conflict of Interest Statement – Declaration of real and apparent Conflicts of Interest, in language comprehensible to average reader, signed by all authors

Redundant Publication Statement – Declaration that the work has not been published previously in whole or in part

Human/animal subjects Statement – Declaration that the study was reviewed by an Ethical Review Committee

Duplicate submissions - Declaration that the work has not been published, or is not being considered for publication, by another journal

Page 12: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

Integrity in Research Publishing

Intellectual honesty in reporting research Accuracy in representing contributions of

other scientists Collegiality in scientific interactions, including

communications and sharing of information Transparency in conflicts of interest or

potential conflicts of interest Protection of human subjects in the conduct

of research Humane care of animals in the conduct of

research Adherence to the mutual authorship

responsibilities between investigators and their research teams.

Adapted from Institute of Medicine (2002)

Page 13: Ethical publishing  by  doing  the right  things

A word on ethics and broader structural issues • Why does sex and gender

matter in science? Gender inequities with regard to research questions, research participants, scientific workforce, and journal decision-making

Recent initiatives to address gender in science. Bibliometrics, NIH requirements, affirmtive action, common standards