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Research Integrity & Publication Ethics: a global perspective

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Presentation on theme: "Research Integrity & Publication Ethics: a global perspective"— Presentation transcript:

1 Research Integrity & Publication Ethics: a global perspective
Elizabeth Wager PhD Publications Consultant, Sideview Co-Editor-in-Chief : Research Integrity & Peer Review Visiting Professor, University of Split, Croatia

2 Challenges of global collaboration Long-distance investigation
Global problems ?Global standards Pressure to publish Predatory publishers Challenges of global collaboration Long-distance investigation Research waste Global initiatives COPE DORA statement Beall’s List WCRI Singapore Statement Montreal Declaration REWARD RIPR EASE

3 Challenges for journal editors
E-journals now attract international submissions Can journals apply local standards to all research? Human research in countries without RECs Different REC requirements Animal research

4 Reviewer comment

5 Details supplied by authors
“Following the guidelines of UCL … and of NRES, such a questionnaire is exempt from requiring REC approval”

6 What was the study? A voluntary, anonymous questionnaire to professional medical writers (invited via / websites) about their knowledge of publication guidelines

7 Editors should assess whether a study was ethical / had the appropriate approval … and should reject if not

8 Editors should assess whether a study was ethical / had the appropriate approval … and should reject if not

9 International submissions
Is misconduct increasing? Or are we just getting better at spotting it? Journals shouldn’t ignore: Fake reviewers Plagiarism Redundant publication (“self-plagiarism”) Fabrication / falsification Authorship disputes

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11 Pressure to publish Nearly all countries use number of publications to measure productivity Some countries give ££ bonuses for publication in high impact factor journals

12 The impact factor “has become an obsession in world science”
The impact factor “has become an obsession in world science” IFs “warp the way that research is conducted, reported, and funded” Aims to “eliminate the use of journal-based metrics” to assess research output

13 An unwelcome response to pressure to publish
Predatory publishers 693 publishers standalone journals (increase from 23 in 2012) Scam journals, not peer-reviewed, not indexed, publish anything Many based in India LMIC researchers vulnerable

14 “whitelist” of legitimate OA journals

15 Challenges Lack of global standards on research integrity
Difficulties of international collaboration

16 World Conferences on Research Integrity (WCRI)

17 http://www. singaporestatement. org/ http://www. researchintegrity

18 WCRI-5 Amsterdam, 2017

19 How should journals approach suspected misconduct from far-flung institutions?
When to contact the institution? Concerns about fair treatment of those accused / whistleblowers Concerns about quality of investigation What to do when institutions don’t respond?

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21 ICMJE Added new authorship criterion (2013)
1) substantial contributions to conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; and 2) drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and 3) final approval of the version to be published; and 4) agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any parts of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

22 Current concerns Waste in research: Unoriginal research Poor design
Poor reporting

23 Weak design in animal studies over-estimates effect size
Randomization Group size Blinded assessment Review of 1117 studies in multiple sclerosis Vesterinen et al MS 2010;16:1044

24 50% of clinical trials unpublished
Of EU-funded health research 50% unpublished 570 million Euros of research had “no detectable academic output” Situation may be improving but evidence-base for most prescribed medicines is badly affected by non-publication Galsworthy et al Lancet 2012;380:971

25 Initiatives to reduce waste in medical research
Prioritisation / question setting Trial registration Full reporting High quality reporting

26 What else do we need? Research on research and reporting / peer review
Editors sharing good practice

27 EASE Theme: “Scientific integrity: editors on the front line”

28 New journal

29 Conclusions There are plenty of challenges (some old, some new)
New technology & globalisation brings new opportunities and challenges But there are also many global initiatives


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