This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
Medical
journals are an important part of continuing education for doctors and other
health providers. Journals say they do their best to publish high quality studies
by trusted authors.
The International
Committee of Medical Journal Editors says: "An 'author' is generally
considered to be someone who has made substantive intellectual contributions to
a published study ... "
In
other words, someone who did much of the work.
Credit
is to be based on three conditions. The first involves designing the study and
gathering and analyzing the data. The second involves preparing the article.
And the third involves final approval of the version to be published.Readers may have
no way to know who did what when studies list several authors. And not all
studies list all their authors.
The Public Library of Science, or PLoS, is a nonprofit organization based in California. Its journals are available
free . The editors of PLoS Medicine ask authors if anyone from a company
or public relations agency suggested or paid for their article.
They also ask if a professional writer
helped with the article and to what extent. And they ask if the article is
similar to articles published in other journals.
By
asking these questions, the editors try to guard against the use of ghost
authors. A ghost author is someone who had a lot to do with an article but is
not given credit.
Drug
companies have been known to pay researchers to place articles in journals to
support their products.
Not
all ghost authors, though, are paid. And there may be nothing scientifically wrong
with a study involving paid authors who are not identified. But journal editors
say everyone who worked on a study needs to take responsibility.
Another
issue is the honorary author. Unlike a ghost author, an honorary author gets
credit in the article but had little if anything to do with it. Authors
sometimes add a well-known name to increase the chances that an article will be
published. For example, the person may be the head of the university department
that did the study.
The
chief editor of PLoS Medicine says honorary authors are a more common problem
than ghost authors. Virginia Barbour says the pressure in higher education to
get published may be responsible for some of this. But she says any kind of dishonesty
can shake people's faith in the medical profession.
We'll
have more on this subject next week. And that's the VOA Special English Education
Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. I'm Steve Ember.