http://unisci.com/stories/20013/0910015.htm
10-Sep-2001
The International Committee of Medical
Journal Editors announced today the publication of revised "Uniform Requirements
for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals: Writing and Editing for
Biomedical Publication."
The participating journals will publish
the revised requirements in the current issue of their respective journals
but they are available online now. The requirements are accompanied by
an editorial, "Sponsorship, Authorship and Accountability," which was jointly
authored by the participating editors.
The editors of the participating
journals are available for comment directly. The editorial and revised
requirements are available via the Internet on the website of each participating
journal (listed alphabetically below):
Annals of Internal Medicine (http://www.annals.org/)
BMJ (http://www.bmj.com/)
Canadian Medical Association Journal
(http://www.cma.ca/cmaj)
International Committee of Medical
Journal Editors (http://www.icmje.org/)
The Journal of the American Medical
Association (http://jama.com/)
Journal of the Danish Medical Association
(no website available)
The Lancet (http://www.thelancet.com/)
The Medical Journal of Australia
(http://www.mja.com.au/)
MEDLINE/Index Medicus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi)
National Library of Medicine (http://www.nlm.nih.gov/)
Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde
(Dutch Journal of Medicine) (http://www.ntvg.nl/)
The New England Journal of Medicine
(http://www.nejm.org/)
New Zealand Medical Journal (http://www.nzma.org.nz/journal)
The Norwegian Medical Association
(http://www.legeforeningen.no/)
Western Journal of Medicine (http://www.ewjm.com/)
Until recently, independent clinical
investigators have been key players in design, patient recruitment and
data interpretation in clinical trials. The Commentary states how economic
pressures are creating an environment in which the pharmaceutical industry,
which often sponsors medical research, exerts control of trial design,
access to raw data and the interpretation of study findings.
Concern is also expressed that research
sponsors may influence decisions about how trials are published and promoted
(if the results are favorable to the sponsor), or obscured (if unfavorable).
The international committee of medical
journal editors has consequently strengthened its guidelines to enable
editors to restrict the publication of research to studies in which the
scientific objectivity of the research is not compromised.
The editorial concludes: "Authorship
means both accountability and independence. A submitted manuscript is the
intellectual property of its authors, not the study sponsor. We will not
review or publish articles based on studies that are conducted under conditions
that allow the sponsor to have sole control of the data or to withhold
publication. We encourage investigators to use the revised ICMJE requirements
on publication ethics to guide the negotiation of research contracts. Those
contracts should give the researchers a substantial say in trial design,
access to the raw data, responsibility for data analysis and interpretation,
and the right to publish -- the hallmarks of scholarly independence and,
ultimately, academic freedom. By enforcing adherence to these revised requirements,
we can as editors assure our readers that the authors of an article have
had a meaningful and truly independent role in the study that bears their
names. The authors can then stand behind the published results, and so
can we."
About the ICMJE
The International Committee of Medical
Journal Editors (ICMJE) is an informal group whose participants fund work
on the Universal Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals.
Originally begun in British Columbia
in 1978, when it was known as the Vancouver Group, the committee first
published requirements for manuscripts and bibliographic references in
1979.
The ICMJE has since expanded and
evolved to address concerns beyond manuscript preparation, such as editorial
freedom, conflict of interest, confidentiality, journal advertising and
the Internet. With participants from hundreds of journals worldwide, the
ICMJE meets annually and is not a membership organization.
Copyright © 1995-2001 UniSci
The revised requirements reflect
the collaborative effort of the editors of twelve peer-reviewed medical
journals in eight countries.