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Ethical Issues in Biomedical Publication

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Drew up the protocol, wrote the grant proposal, and then died in mysterious circumstances. D. Sir Bloated Corpulent, ... III F. Polly Paired-T-Test, statistician. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethical Issues in Biomedical Publication


1
Ethical Issues in Biomedical Publication
  • Arash Etemadi, MD PhD
  • Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics,
    School of Public Health, Tehran University of
    Medical Sciences
  • aetemadi_at_tums.ac.ir

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  • www.icmje.org
  • http//tumspress.tums.ac.ir

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  • Study design and ethical approval
  • Data analysis
  • Authorship
  • Conflicts of interest
  • Peer review
  • Redundant publication (and duplicate submission)
  • Plagiarism and fraud
  • Dealing with misconduct

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Authorship/contributorshipWho is an author? I
  • A totally blind haphazard study of the effect of
    being left-handed on promotion within medicine
  • A. Professor Sir Joshua Fulloftosh, president of
    the university. Raised the grant, got permission
    for the study from the left-handed society
  • B. Professor Michael Halfpenny, British American
    Tobacco professor in the joint department of
    respiratory, left-handedness, and imaginary
    studies. Suggested the idea for the trial before
    departing for a six month sabbatical in the
    Seychelles and handled the postpublication media
    coverage by satellite

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Authorship/contributorshipWho is an author? II
  • C. Dr Alec Fedup, senior lecturer in the
    department of left-handed studies. Drew up the
    protocol, wrote the grant proposal, and then died
    in mysterious circumstances.
  • D. Sir Bloated Corpulent, visiting consultant.
    Allowed his staff to be entered haphazardly into
    the study
  • E. Dr Alice Holditalltogether, senior registrar.
    Ran the study, collected the data and sent them
    to the statistician, arranged for the writing up
    of the study, and negotiated with the editors

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Authorship/contributorshipWho is an author? III
  • F. Polly Paired-T-Test, statistician. Did all the
    analysis, prepared the tables
  • G. Pamela Poltergeist, editorial adviser to the
    left-handed people. Wrote the paper
  • E. Professor Avaricious Loadsapesetas, director
    of the Acapulco Institute of International
    left-handedness and Financial Studies. Allowed
    his name to be added to the paper in exchange for
    a lucrative consultancy. Unfortunately didnt
    have time to read the paper.

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Authorship
  • For each individual the privilege of authorship
    should be based on a significant contribution to
    the conceptualization, design, execution, and/or
    interpretation of the research study, as well as
    a willingness to assume responsibility for the
    study.
  • Guidelines for the Conduct of Research in the
    Intramural Research Programs at NIH.
    http//www.nih.gov/news/irnews/guidelines.htmanch
    or128256

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  • Authorship credit should be based on
  • 1) substantial contributions to conception and
    design, or acquisition of data, or analysis and
    interpretation of data
  • 2) drafting the article or revising it critically
    for important intellectual content
  • and 3) final approval of the version to be
    published.
  • Authors should meet conditions 1, 2, and 3.

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  • Acquisition of funding, collection of data, or
    general supervision of the research group, alone,
    does not justify authorship.
  • All persons designated as authors should qualify
    for authorship, and all those who qualify should
    be listed.
  • Each author should have participated sufficiently
    in the work to take public responsibility for
    appropriate portions of the content.
  • The order of authorship on the byline should be a
    joint decision of the co-authors. Authors should
    be prepared to explain the order in which authors
    are listed.

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  • All contributors who do not meet the criteria for
    authorship should be listed in an acknowledgments
    section. Examples of those who might be
    acknowledged include a person who provided purely
    technical help, writing assistance, or a
    department chair who provided only general
    support. Financial and material support should
    also be acknowledged.
  • Groups of persons who have contributed materially
    to the paper but whose contributions do not
    justify authorship may be listed under a heading
    such as clinical investigators or
    participating investigators

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  • When a large, multi-center group has conducted
    the work, the group should identify the
    individuals who accept direct responsibility for
    the manuscript.
  • These individuals should fully meet the criteria
    for authorship defined above.
  • An example GEMINI

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Authorship (Order)
  • Significance depends on field
  • First Author a coveted position (second
    author?)
  • Complicated by equal collaborations
  • Now most commonly
  • Janet DiMarci, Louis Hernandez, Arthur Smith, and
    Wen Zhou

day to day responsibility
head of lab/PI
16
Conflicts of interest
  • Conflicts of interest comprise those which may
    not be fully apparent and which may influence the
    judgment of author, reviewers, and editors.
  • They have been described as those which, when
    revealed later, would make a reasonable reader
    feel misled or deceived.
  • They may be personal, commercial, political,
    academic or financial.
  • Financial interests may include employment,
    research funding, stock or share ownership,
    payment for lectures or travel, consultancies and
    company support for staff.

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  • Competing interests Tim Albert earns his living
    from running courses on effective writing skills.

18
Redundant publication/ duplicate submission
  • Redundant publication occurs when two or more
    papers, without full cross reference, share the
    same hypothesis, data, discussion points, or
    conclusions.
  • Duplicate submission is when the same manuscript
    has been sent to journal while still under
    evaluation by another.

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Find 2 differences and win!
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To be continued
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  • (1) Published studies do not need to be repeated
    unless further confirmation is required.
  • (2) Previous publication of an abstract during
    the proceedings of meetings does not preclude
    subsequent submission for publication, but full
    disclosure should be made at the time of
    submission.
  • (3) Re-publication of a paper in another language
    is acceptable, provided that there is full and
    prominent disclosure of its original source at
    the time of submission.
  • (4) At the time of submission, authors should
    disclose details of related papers, even if in a
    different language, and similar papers in press.

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What is fraud?
  • Fabrification Invention of data or cases
  • Falsification Wilful distortion of data
  • Ignoring outliers?
  • Not admitting that some data are missing.
  • Post hoc analyses that are not admitted?
  • Not including data on side effects in a clinical
    trial

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What is fraud?
  • Plagiarism Copying of data or papers
  • But by how much?
  • Stealing ideas?
  • Redundant publication
  • Gift authorship.
  • Not attributing other authors.
  • Not publishing research
  • Not disclosing a conflict of interest

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  • Etblast
  • Deja vu

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Plagiarism
  • Plagiarism ranges from the unreferenced use of
    others published and unpublished ideas,
    including research grant applications to
    submission under new authorship of a complete
    paper, sometimes in a different language.
  • It may occur at any stage of planning, research,
    writing, or publication it applies to print and
    electronic versions.
  • All sources should be disclosed, and if large
    amounts of other peoples written or illustrative
    material is to be used, permission must be
    sought.

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  • Serious misconduct
  • Less serious misconduct
  • Sanctions, blacklists
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