Conflict of interest (author)

Case

An author thinks that a journal’s decision not to publish is ethically incorrect

03-02

A submitted paper reported on the investigation and management of an outbreak of a disease in a work environment (Company A). The authors acknowledged the referring physician from the workplace—who had declined on legal advice to be listed as an author—and also declared that the lead author had provided medical advice for remuneration to Company A during legal proceedings related to the outbreak discussed in the article.

Case

Undeclared conflicts of interest and potential author dispute over signed letter for publication

01-16

A letter was published that provides guidance on prescribing a particular drug in children. There are anxieties about the use of this drug in children, and sometime back a letter from essentially the same group on the same subject was published in the same journal. The electronic version of this original letter included a conflict of interest statement, but the paper edition did not. This was a mistake.

Case

The incomplete systematic review

01-01

A systematic review on the effectiveness of a comparatively new group of drugs was submitted. The review had originally been for an independent body, so the submission was an abridged version. A reviewer pointed out that the review made no reference to a Cochrane review and the trials it cited, which had been published some four months before submission of the paper to the journal.

Case

The undeclared competing interest

00-26

An author wrote us a letter for publication on the importance of doing research on a long established drug. He did not declare any competing interest, but we were later informed that he was conducting a trial of the drug funded by a pharmaceutical company. We approached him and asked him to declare his competing interest. Have we done the right thing? Should we do more than simply ask him to declare his competing interest and publish that declaration the journal?

Case

The dubious scientist

00-19

A scientist wrote to a medical journal asking if it was interested in receiving an editorial from him. The editorial would criticise current HIV vaccine research. The scientist is the senior partner of a technology company, and he printed his company’s website in his communication to the journal.

Case

Authorship dispute

00-13

发表了一篇有三位作者名字的文章。并非所有提交人的签名都包含在原始提交信中。Y提出了投诉,他说X在未经他或Z同意或不知情的情况下提交了论文,并且有几个具体的错误和遗漏。随后,Y提交了一份声明,要求在《华尔街日报》上发表,与发表的文章分道扬镳。

Case

Undeclared conflict of interest

00-12

论文从th在一个有争议的话题ree authors was published. All three authors completed forms to say that they did not have competing interests. This was stated at the end of the paper. A reader subsequently contacted the journal to say that she had clear evidence that one of the authors did have competing interests. He had, she said, been involved in legal cases and received substantial payments for his work. The article related to these legal cases.

Case

The declared and the undeclared competing interests

99-26

An editorial was published on a particular subject in which the author’s competing interests were declared. He had given evidence on behalf of patients making a claim against a manufacturer. Three people then separately pointed out that we had already published a commentary on the same subject in which there had been no declaration of competing interest for the author. The three people all said that this author did have competing interests.

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