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They lie, they cheat and they steal. Judging by the cases described by a group
of medical journal editors, scientists are no different from the rest of us.

Last week's annual report1of the Committee on Publishing Ethics details the
misdemeanours that the group of journal editors grappled with in 2003.
Although the number of reported cases - 29 - is tiny compared with the tens
of thousands of papers published in medical journals every year, the cases
cover a wide range of unethical activity, from attempted bribery to potential
medical malpractice.

Many of the tricks will be familiar to schoolchildren. Two complaints concern
cases where researchers were accused of copying someone else's work. When
editors investigated, they agreed that the papers were almost identical
versions of previously published material, and that plagiarism was the most
likely explanation.

Confronted with the evidence, researchers behind one paper insisted that their
paper contained only 5% overlap with the original. Another author, when
eventually reached by mobile phone, admitted some similarities; but at that
point the call ended abruptly.

Duplicate publication, where the same paper is printed twice in different
journals to boost publication records, is the most common offence, accounting
for seven of 29 cases. This fits with previous studies of the practice.

A 2003 survey of ophthalmology journals estimated that at least 1.5% of all
papers are duplicates2. Some researchers seem to have perfected the art: a
study released last month identified two papers that had each been published
five times3.

Compulsory action

Conflicts of interest also rear their head in the report. One journal ran a
paper on passive smoking from authors who omitted to mention that they had
received funding from the tobacco industry. Further probing revealed that the
author had received tobacco company money throughout his career and even
lobbied for the industry.

In cases where the misconduct concerns medical treatments, the report becomes
more disturbing. The editors discuss several studies where medical procedures
were run by researchers who did not have proper ethical clearance.

One paper revealed that blood samples were taken from healthy babies to set up
a control group for a study. This was a painful procedure that the paper's
authors later said wouldn't normally be sanctioned for research purposes. The
nature of their ethical approval for the procedure was never cleared up.

When confronted with such issues, journal editors usually contact the
researchers' employers or ethics committees, who may take action. But this is
not compulsory.

The publishing committee wants to formalize this course of action in a code of
ethical conduct for editors. It has published a draft of such a code
alongside its report, and a final version should be ready in the next few
months. The committee wants all editors of medical journals, including its
180 or so members, to sign up to the code and agree to be bound by the
associated disciplinary procedures.

Such a code should clarify editors' duties. It should also make clear, if it
is not already, which activities are inappropriate. The report describes one
bid to persuade an editor to accept a manuscript, in which an anonymous
caller offered to buy 1000 reprints of the published paper. "And," the caller
added, "I will buy you dinner at any restaurant you choose."


They lie, they cheat and they steal. Judging by the cases described by a group
of medical journal editors, scientists are no different from the rest of us.

Last week's annual report1of the Committee on Publishing Ethics details the
misdemeanours that the group of journal editors grappled with in 2003.
Although the number of reported cases - 29 - is tiny compared with the tens
of thousands of papers published in medical journals every year, the cases
cover a wide range of unethical activity, from attempted bribery to potential
medical malpractice.

Many of the tricks will be familiar to schoolchildren. Two complaints concern
cases where researchers were accused of copying someone else's work. When
editors investigated, they agreed that the papers were almost identical
versions of previously published material, and that plagiarism was the most
likely explanation.

Confronted with the evidence, researchers behind one paper insisted that their
paper contained only 5% overlap with the original. Another author, when
eventually reached by mobile phone, admitted some similarities; but at that
point the call ended abruptly.

Duplicate publication, where the same paper is printed twice in different
journals to boost publication records, is the most common offence, accounting
for seven of 29 cases. This fits with previous studies of the practice.

A 2003 survey of ophthalmology journals estimated that at least 1.5% of all
papers are duplicates2. Some researchers seem to have perfected the art: a
study released last month identified two papers that had each been published
five times3.

Compulsory action

Conflicts of interest also rear their head in the report. One journal ran a
paper on passive smoking from authors who omitted to mention that they had
received funding from the tobacco industry. Further probing revealed that the
author had received tobacco company money throughout his career and even
lobbied for the industry.

In cases where the misconduct concerns medical treatments, the report becomes
more disturbing. The editors discuss several studies where medical procedures
were run by researchers who did not have proper ethical clearance.

One paper revealed that blood samples were taken from healthy babies to set up
a control group for a study. This was a painful procedure that the paper's
authors later said wouldn't normally be sanctioned for research purposes. The
nature of their ethical approval for the procedure was never cleared up.

When confronted with such issues, journal editors usually contact the
researchers' employers or ethics committees, who may take action. But this is
not compulsory.

The publishing committee wants to formalize this course of action in a code of
ethical conduct for editors. It has published a draft of such a code
alongside its report, and a final version should be ready in the next few
months. The committee wants all editors of medical journals, including its
180 or so members, to sign up to the code and agree to be bound by the
associated disciplinary procedures.

Such a code should clarify editors' duties. It should also make clear, if it
is not already, which activities are inappropriate. The report describes one
bid to persuade an editor to accept a manuscript, in which an anonymous
caller offered to buy 1000 reprints of the published paper. "And," the caller
added, "I will buy you dinner at any restaurant you choose."

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