Rachel Wolfson, MD Vineet Arora, MD, MA.  Workshop based on curriculum for junior faculty found in MedEdPORTAL O’Sullivan P, Chauvin S, Wolf F, Richardson.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Authorship APS Professional Skills Course:
Advertisements

Responsible Authorship, Publication Practices, and Peer Review
How to publish a case report
HOW TO WRITE AN ARTICLE FOR PUBLICATION Leana Uys FUNDISA.
Authorship David Knauft UGA Graduate School & Horticulture Department.
Group 3 – Benny, Tao, Ruth. “Authorship credit should be based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design, acquisition of data, or analysis.
Customs for authorship in Biomedicine Peter G Robinson School of Clinical Dentistry.
What they never taught me about being a clinician investigator.
RESPONSIBLE AUTHORSHIP Office for Research Protections The Pennsylvania State University Adapted from Scientific Integrity: An Internet-based course in.
The material was supported by an educational grant from Ferring How to Write a Scientific Article Nikolaos P. Polyzos M.D. PhD.
III. Research Integrity, authorship and attribution Yves A DeClerck MD Professor of Pediatrics and Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
Authorship Kazem Heidari.
The ethics of multiple authorship in East Asia The case of Hong Kong Bruce Macfarlane University of Hull, 17 th March 2015.
ETHICAL ISSUES IN THE PUBLICATION OF RESEARCH Muhammad Taher Abuelma’atti Department of Electrical Engineering King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals.
Reading the Literature
Applying to Ph.D. programs CBS Proseminar Topic Fall 2005.
1 Authorship Bernard Lo, M.D. August 27, Questions  Looked self up in Pub Med?  Omitted as author?  Co-author didn’t deserve it?  Asked to.
Teaching Scientific Research Skills in an Elective Curriculum: Obstacles, Opportunities and Outcome Ingrid Bahner PhD Co-Leader of the Biomedical Research.
Dr. Dinesh Kumar Assistant Professor Department of ENT, GMC Amritsar.
Writing & Getting Published Uwe Grimm (based on slides by Claudia Eckert) MCT, The Open University.
American Chemical Society The Role of Undergraduate Research in the Certified Chemistry Major Thomas Wenzel Department of Chemistry Bates College Lewiston,
2014 Fall Faculty Development Seminar UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA COLLEGE OF DENTISTRY – GAINESVILLE, FL * supported by Faculty Development (1 D86HP
Discovery Phase: where do we go from here? Co-directors contact information: Dr. Maureen Powers, Department of Cell Biology,
Reading and Evaluating Research KINE 5300 Research Methods Dr. Joel T. Cramer CSCS,*D; NSCA-CPT,*D; ACSM H/FI Assistant Professor Department of Kinesiology.
Undergraduate Science Journal (USJ) Orientation Meeting
NA-MIC National Alliance for Medical Image Computing Publications Guidelines Eric Grimson.
PROMOTION AND TENURE FOR CLINICAL SCIENTISTS – BOTH PATHWAYS Peter Emanuel, M.D. Laura Lamps, M.D.
Authorship conflict scenarios presence/absence and order Tom Little, Dan Nussey, Sue Healy and Neil Metcalfe.
Discovery Phase: what next? Co-directors contact information: Dr. Maureen Powers, Department of Cell Biology,
BUILDING A SUCCESSFUL RESEARCH CAREER. Establishing a research team.
Publication Ethics Hooman Momen, Editor Bulletin of the World Health Organization.
Authorship and accountability ContributorshipContributorship –Listed authors deserve authorship IndependenceIndependence –The authors enjoyed the prerogatives.
Responsible Conduct of Research Publications. Authorship Acknowledging contributors Conflicts of interest Overlapping publications
Acknowledgements and Conflicts of interest Dr Gurpreet Kaur Associate Professor Dept of Pharmacology Government Medical College Amritsar.
Publication ethics Professor Magne Nylenna, M.D., PhD
How to write a scientific article Nikolaos P. Polyzos M.D. PhD.
Training Grants: Introduction Read the Program Announcement Pick most appropriate program Follow directions and organize in order.
Publication Ethics R.Raveendran Chief Editor, Journal of Pharmacology & Pharmacotherapeutics.
Discovery Phase: what next? Co-directors contact information: Dr. Maureen Powers, Department of Cell Biology,
FOR 500 The Publication Process Karl Williard & John Groninger.
Publication Ethics Hooman Momen, Editor Bulletin of the World Health Organization SUMBER: bvs4.icml9.org/.../Presentation%20to%20%20ethics%20workshop ‎
Applying to Ph.D. programs CBS Proseminar Topic Fall 2011.
Authorship Criteria; Updated Version 2013 By: Behrooz Astaneh MD Founder and Head, Medical Journalism Department Visiting Editor, BMJ COPE Council Member.
Intensive Course in Research Writing: Session 1 (27 June 2011)
Authorship, peer review and conflicts of interest.
Ethics and Scientific Writing. Ethical Considerations Ethics more important than legal considerations Your name and integrity are all that you have!
While you are waiting Pick up an index card. Please write on it any question or authorship challenge that you want to have discussed. We plan to save time.
Preparing a Written Report Prepared by: R Bortolussi MD FRCPC and Noni MacDonald MD FRCPC.
Writing Your First Paper Rebecca A. Silliman, MD, PhD Director of Research, Section of Geriatrics Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology October 28, 2014.
Today: Authorship and Conflicts of Interest Homework #7 (due 10/26 or 27) Notebooks will be turned when you turn in your inquiry 3 proposal.
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Tama Hasson Co-Editors-in-Chief: Peter Nauka Leslie Chang.
Dr. Sundar Christopher Navigating Graduate School and Beyond: Sow Well Now To Reap Big Later Writing Papers.
HOW TO WRITE A PAPER FOR PUBLICATION IN A SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL.
Ethical Considerations Dr. Richard Adanu Editor-in-Chief International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics (IJGO)
UEF // University of Eastern Finland How to publish scientific journal articles? 10 STEPS TO SUCCESS lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll.
Getting published Sue Symons Editorial Manager Karen Mattick
MUSC Biomedical Trainee Retreat on the Responsible Conduct of Research
Why Authorship is Important
Clinical Research: Introduction to LMC’s Research Program
Mojtaba Farjam, MD PhD, member of ethics committee for research
What Reviewers look for NIH F30-33(FELLOWSHIP) GRANTS
Writing up your results
ICJME Authorship Criteria
What the Editors want to see!
Advice on getting published
University of Missouri, Columbia
MANUSCRIPT WRITING TIPS, TRICKS, & INFORMATION Madison Hedrick, MA
Publishing Your Quality Improvement Work Jennifer Elston Lafata, PhD
Authorship: Who gets it, who earned it, and why?
Presentation transcript:

Rachel Wolfson, MD Vineet Arora, MD, MA

 Workshop based on curriculum for junior faculty found in MedEdPORTAL O’Sullivan P, Chauvin S, Wolf F, Richardson D, Blanco M. Authorship Issues in Publishing and Career Development Workshop. MedEdPORTAL; Available from: 9

Success in S&D Publication

 Survey in January 2013 (n=82) ◦ Many feel unprepared to approach a mentor about authorship ◦ Most suggested that a workshop on authorship would be helpful  Survey of medical students doing a year of NIH research ◦ 66% never received training on authorship ◦ 41% thought training would be valuable

At the conclusion of the workshop participants will be able to: Define criteria and guidelines for authorship Recognize dilemmas that can arise in determining authorship Identify resources that may be useful to help with authorship decisions

 You are working with Dr. Smith for SRP. Dr. Smith started this project last year, and you spend the summer analyzing data, which you turn over as Excel files to the fellow working on the project with you. You learn at the Winter Break that the paper has been written and submitted, but that you are not listed as an author. You are upset.

 You worked with on a large clinical trial with Dr. Green for SRP. You worked diligently to extract patient data from EPIC and enter it into Excel, drafted part of the introduction to the paper, and even conducted some preliminary data analysis. An undergraduate was working on the project as well; her role was to consent patients for study enrollment. Dr. Green sends the manuscript to you for review before submission. Your name is on the manuscript, the undergraduate’s name is not.

 You want to apply for dermatology. You did not do SRP, and you return to second year anxious about conducting research that will be well received in this competitive field. You find a mentor, but at the start of the MS2 block the project is behind schedule due to IRB approval. The mentor suggests that you work on a literature review to use as the background section of a planned future manuscript. In March, you learn that the project was completed, the manuscript was published, and your mentor listed you as an author. You are happy to add this to your CV.

 Your roommate is working with a senior faculty member to analyze clinical data collected several years ago as part of an R01 (NIH Research Project Grant). She also drafts most of the paper, and reviews her mentor’s edits prior to submission. She is first author on the paper. You are working closely with a junior faculty member on a new quality and safety project that she developed with her senior mentor as part of a K23 (NIH Career Development Award). You collect the data, and like your roommate, you analyze the data, help to draft the paper, and review edits before submission. Your mentor is first author, you are middle author, and a senior faculty member is last author. You are upset.

 You decide to work in the lab with Dr. Woods. She gives you a project to work on for SRP, which you complete, and then write the paper. When you leave at the end of the summer, the paper is in draft form. Dr. Woods and her post- docs spend a significant amount of time rewriting the paper, and send you the final version before it is submitted. You are disappointed to note that the post-docs are the first two authors, then you, then the faculty. You were hoping to be first author.

 You work on a Quality and Safety project during the MS2 Block. You have enough data at the end of the Block to submit an abstract to a regional meeting. Abstract submission is on-line and you are nearing the deadline. You put yourself as first author, your mentor as second author, and the MS4 who helped you as third author. The next week you give your mentor a printed confirmation of abstract submission. Your mentor tells you there were two other people who should have been included, and that she wanted to be the last author.

 Authors take responsibility and credit for work that is published ◦ Prestige ◦ Program ◦ Productivity ◦ Promotion

 Accurate understanding of the criteria for authorship  Open and EARLY discussions with your mentor  Understand expectations up front  Honest appraisal your contributions  Willingness to ask questions

 The mentor holds the last position in author order.  To be an author, a person needs to have helped draft the manuscript or revise it for important content.  All authors must give final approval of a manuscript submitted for publication.

1. Substantial contributions to conception and design, 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. Must meet ALL THREE criteria for authorship!!!

 Conception and design  Acquisition of data  Analysis and interpretation of data

 Required for authorship  Do not have to write the entire manuscript, but must contribute in some way

 Must read and concur with submission  Hopefully understand the role of each of the authors  An opportunity to remove your name if you are not in agreement with the data being presented

 Ghost authorship  Guest authorship  Gift authorship Unacknowledged authorship by industry writers Authorship credit to someone who did not contribute to the research Authorship to someone with name recognition to enhance the likelihood of publication

 First author is usually the person who contributes the most to the project ◦ Measuring who “contributes most” is completely at the discretion of the mentor ◦ Often, student projects rely on a substantial amount of “set up” before the student enters the scene  Mentor/senior author is generally last  Middle authorship variable

 Acknowledgements! ◦ Within the text of the paper ◦ Allows authors to give credit to those who contributed to the work, but not substantially enough to justify authorship  Lab tech who maintains cell culture lines  Statistical assistance  Research assistant who enrolled patients in a clinical trial

 You are working with Dr. Smith for SRP. Dr. Smith started this project last year, and you spend the summer analyzing data, which you turn over as Excel files to the fellow working on the project with you. You learn at the Winter Break that the paper has been written and submitted, but that you are not listed as an author. You are upset.

 You worked with on a large clinical trial with Dr. Green for SRP. You worked diligently to extract patient data from EPIC and enter it into Excel, drafted part of the introduction to the paper, and even conducted some preliminary data analysis. An undergraduate was working on the project as well; her role was to consent patients for study enrollment. Dr. Green sends the manuscript to you for review before submission. Your name is on the manuscript, the undergraduate’s name is not.

 You want to apply for dermatology. You did not do SRP, and you return to second year anxious about conducting research that will be well received in this competitive field. You find a mentor, but at the start of the MS2 block the project is behind schedule due to IRB approval. The mentor suggests that you work on a literature review to use as the background section of a planned future manuscript. In March, you learn that the project was completed, the manuscript was published, and your mentor listed you as an author. You are happy to add this to your CV.

 Your roommate is working with a senior faculty member to analyze clinical data collected several years ago as part of an R01 (NIH Research Project Grant). She also drafts most of the paper, and reviews her mentor’s edits prior to submission. She is first author on the paper. You are working closely with a junior faculty member on a new quality and safety project that she developed with her senior mentor as part of a K23 (NIH Career Development Award). You collect the data, and like your roommate, you analyze the data, help to draft the paper, and review edits before submission. Your mentor is first author, you are middle author, and a senior faculty member is last author. You are upset.

 You decide to work in the lab with Dr. Woods. She gives you a project to work on for SRP, which you complete, and then write the paper. When you leave at the end of the summer, the paper is in draft form. Dr. Woods and her post- docs spend a significant amount of time rewriting the paper, and send you the final version before it is submitted. You are disappointed to note that the post-docs are the first two authors, then you, then the faculty. You were hoping to be first author.

 You work on a Quality and Safety project during the MS2 Block. You have enough data at the end of the Block to submit an abstract to a regional meeting. Abstract submission is on-line and you are nearing the deadline. You put yourself as first author, your mentor as second author, and the MS4 who helped you as third author. The next week you give your mentor a printed confirmation of abstract submission. Your mentor tells you there were two other people who should have been included, and that she wanted to be the last author.

 Authorship requires fulfillment of ALL THREE ICMJE criteria  Talk to your mentor often, but especially ◦ Before embarking on your project ◦ As writing of the manuscript begins ◦ When you are stepping away from the project due to scheduling, but want to insure you are not forgotten  Ask the S&D team for help!!!