Presentation at the Workshop at Jizan
University by Professor Omar Hasan Kasule Sr. MB ChB (MUK), MPH (Harvard), DrPH
(Harvard) Chairman Institutional Review Board and Ethics Committee King Fahad Medical
City Riyadh
INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH MALPRACTICE: prevalence and attitudes
·
Seeds of
research malpractice are in the research proposal
·
Research
malpractice is common[1]
·
Violation of
ethics reason for retractions[2]
·
Research malpractice
reflects wrong attitudes
·
Short course
can change attitude to fraud[3]
·
Poor attitude
to plagiarism in Iran[6]
INTRODUCTION TO RESEARCH MALPRACTICE: causes
·
Research grants
are an avenue for academic promotion and professional growth[7]
·
Competitive
nature of scientific grants may motivate misbehavior
·
Career and
reputation from publishing can motivate misconduct[8]
·
Funding
expectations are associated with research misbehavior: public vs private[9]
·
Research wrong
doing in Nigeria due to knowledge gaps in ethics and the pressure to publish[10]
INVESTIGATORS AND AUTHORSHIP
·
Principal
investigator / co-investigators or sub-investigators must be mentioned
·
All names
mentioned must have substantial recorded contribution
·
The issue of
the senior author/boss/friend/colleague?: scratch my back and I scratch yours
·
All names
mentioned must have agreed to be part of the study
·
Doubtful cases:
students, research assistants, laboratory technicians?
ORIGINALITY
·
Thorough
literature review to make sure this investigation is original
·
Check clearing
houses such as Cochrane and www.clinicaltrials.org
·
Cite and
acknowledge all information used in the proposal
·
Why repeat
research already done? Local experience / training/scientific validation
·
Writing
proposals from boiler plates
PLAGIARISM: definition
·
Create or copy?.
Is it possible to create from nothing?[11].
·
Plagiarism is a
complex phenomena that may be related to memory lapses and not always
deliberate deception[12] [13] [14]
·
Un-intended
plagiarism: ideas gained in discussions or from the class room?
·
What if it is
your original idea bit someone already thought of it?
·
Self plagiarism[15]?
PLAGIARISM: detection and avoidance
·
Plagiarism
detection services[16]
·
If in doubt run
a plagiarism software.
·
If you are a
research administrator should you write proposals?
PROTECTING YOUR IDEAS FROM PLAGIARISTS
·
Discuss your
research with colleagues / students OR be secretive
·
Departmental
review / research committees?
·
Carefully
document your new ideas and create evidence they are yours
CONFIDENTIALITY and PRIVACY
·
Measures of
protecting personal data must be described
·
Access to
personal research data: papers and computers must be on a need to know basis
·
Use of
anonymized data
INFORMED CONSENT
·
Description of
information to be given to subjects
·
Description of
the process of informed consent
·
Attach
documents to be used
DISCLOSURE
·
Disclose all
what you want to do in objectives and methods.
·
Do not add
secret ideas later for fear they may not be approved if presented upfront
·
If you get
additional ideas submit an amendment
FINANCIAL INTEGRITY / COI
·
Mention other
sources of funding
·
Conflict of
interest regarding the expected sponsor
·
Paying someone
to write part or all the proposal
REGULATORY
AFFAIRS
·
IRB requirements
·
SFDA requirements
·
GCP requirements
·
Others eg NIH
NOTES
[1] DuBois JM1, Anderson EE, Chibnall J. Assessing the need for a research ethics
remediation program. Clin Transl Sci. 2013 Jun;6(3):209-13.
[2] Resnik DB1, Dinse GE. Scientific retractions and corrections related to misconduct findings. Author information. J Med Ethics.
2013 Jan;39(1):46-50.
[3] Vuckovic-Dekic
L1, Gavrilovic D, Kezic I, Bogdanovic G, Brkic S. Science ethics education part II:
changes in attitude toward scientific fraud among medical researchers after a
short course in science ethics. J BUON. 2012 Apr-Jun;17(2):391-5..
[4] Vuckovic-Dekic
L1, Gavrilovic D, Kezic I, Bogdanovic G, Brkic S. Science ethics education part II:
changes in attitude toward scientific fraud among medical researchers after a
short course in science ethics. J BUON. 2012 Apr-Jun;17(2):391-5.
[6] Ghajarzadeh M1, Norouzi-Javidan
A, Hassanpour K, Aramesh K, Emami-Razavi
SH. Attitude toward plagiarism among
Iranian medical faculty members. Acta Med Iran. 2012 Nov;50(11):778-81.
[7] Crockett SD1, Dellon ES, Bright SD, Shaheen NJ. A 25-year analysis of the American College of Gastroenterology research grant program: factors associated with publication and advancement in academics. Am J Gastroenterol. 2009 May;104(5):1097-105.
[8] Krishnan V. Etiquette in scientific publishing. Am J Orthod
Dentofacial Orthop. 2013 Oct;144(4):577-82
[9] Martinson BC1, Crain AL, Anderson MS, De Vries R. Institutions' expectations
for researchers' self-funding, federal grant holding, and private industry involvement:
manifold drivers of self-interest and researcher behavior. Acad Med. 2009 Nov;84(11):1491-9.
[10] Adeleye OA1, Adebamowo CA. Factors associated with research wrongdoing in Nigeria. J Empir Res
Hum Res Ethics. 2012 Dec;7(5):15-24.
[12]
Perfect TJ1, Defeldre AC, Elliman R, Dehon H. No evidence of age-related increases in unconscious plagiarism during free recall. Memory. 2011 Jul;19(5):514-28.
[13]
Kennedy D. Sherlock Holmes and the case of the plagiarised paper. Nurse Educ Today.
2011 Jul;31(5):525-30.
[14]
Sugimori E1, Kitagami S. Plagiarism as an illusional sense of authorship: the effect of predictability on
source attribution of thought. Author information. Acta Psychol (Amst). 2013 May;143(1):35-9.
.
[15] Andreescu L. Self-plagiarism in academic publishing: the
anatomy of a misnomer. Sci Eng Ethics. 2013 Sep;19(3):775-97.
[16] Garner HR. Combating unethical
publications with plagiarism detection services. Urol Oncol. 2011
Jan-Feb;29(1):95-9.
[17] Bischoff WR1, Abrego PC. Rapid assessment of assignments using plagiarism
detection software. Nurse Educ. 2011 Nov-Dec;36(6):236-7.