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http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/326/7394/883
Consent was not obtained
Problem is greater than editorial indicates
It's my journal, and I'll write if I want to
Authors' reply
EDITOR
So, the editor of the BMJ is happy to
coauthor research involving undeclared deception of subjects and publish it in
his journal.1 Three hundred readers were
unwitting dupes. They took part without being informed what the real
object of the exercise was, no informed consent here, at least not by
the standard of being willing to show the subject the research
protocol.
This sort of research violates Kant's categorical imperative
act as if this
were a universal principle. It seeks payment in a coin that it
debases for others.2 BMJ readers should be
warned: next time a researcher contacts you for an opinion, it is
probably a hoax.
What is ironic about the paper is that the results have meaning only if the
respondents were more honest than the authors. My warning to
researchers is as follows: if you deceive your subjects what right
have you to expect they will not do the same to you?3
Stephen J Senn
University College London, London WC1E 6BT
stephens@public-health.ucl.ac.uk
Competing interests: SJS is a consultant to the pharmaceutical industry and an academic. His career is therefore furthered by publication.
| 1. | Chaudhry S, Schroter S, Smith R, Morris J. Does
declaration of competing interests affect readers' perceptions? A
randomised trial. BMJ 2002; 325: 1391-1392 |
| 2. | Senn SJ. The ignoble lie. J Clin Epidemiol 1992; 45: 1338-1339[Medline]. |
| 3. | Senn SJ. Are placebo run-ins justified? BMJ
1997; 314: 1191 |
Problem is greater than editorial indicates
EDITOR
The BMJ should be congratulated for its
efforts to avoid bias in the reporting of scientific work.1
Asking editors and authors explicitly to state competing interests
reduces the likelihood of bias. As Smith rightly says, however, we
still have some way to go to the fully transparent world. Much of the
discussion of conflict of interest may leave the impression that the
problem lies in commercial sponsorship, in particular from the
pharmaceutical and tobacco industries.
The problem may be more widespread, however. Could researchers in a public health institute be influenced by political pressures when the institute is financed directly by the health ministry? Will the pressure become stronger when the research institute is placed within the ministry? Can researchers who receive honoraria for advising government and courts on tobacco issues be influenced by the fees they receive? If researchers can be influenced by commercial sponsorship, and the evidence here is convincing, why should researchers be immune to influence from other sponsors? Nevertheless, it is not unusual that research financed by government and other non-commercial sources is presented without warning the reader that there is a potential conflict of interest.
My point is not that bias from commercial sponsorship should be belittled but
rather to emphasise that the problem is greater than Smith's
editorial may indicate. Policies to avoid bias in the conduct and
reporting of research should be guided by scientific principles, not
by moralism or prejudice.
Ivar S Kristiansen
Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, DK-5000 Odense,
Denmark ivarsk@c2i.net
Competing interests: ISK has received salary and honoraria from several public institutions and honoraria from several pharmaceutical firms. He has not received honoraria from the tobacco industry.
| 1. | Smith R. Making progress with competing interests.
BMJ 2002; 325: 1375-1376 |
It's my journal, and I'll write if I want to
EDITOR
Richard and colleagues just walked Through the door
Like a king with his court.
He says he's had a great idea
And surely to publish they ought.
Sorry, my muse left on holiday after that. Please feel free to add some more verses. Like other respondents, I applaud the BMJ 's crusade to enlighten readers about the issues of conflicting interests.1 The paper by Chaudhry et al should surely have been submitted to another journal, or if not then someone else should have it.2 The BMJ 's peer journals are not the BMJ itself.
Could we be informed as to how long the paper was out at the reviewers and how quickly it got accepted in its final version? It was published within six weeks of acceptance. That's nice. I have had work published in the BMJ, on one occasion after the manuscript (and I am quoting directly from the correspondence at the time) "lay in the top drawer" of a staff statistician's desk for six months. I doubt that would ever happen to an editor's paper.
These are small points but if the BMJ 's crusade is to be credible and
successful, inhouse guidelines about staff submissions should be torn
up and replaced by a rule that BMJ related work is only
submitted elsewhere.
Jonathan O'B Hourihane
Mailpoint 218, Southampton University Hospitals NHS Trust, Southampton SO16 6YD
j.hourihane@soton.ac.uk
Competing interests: None declared.
| 1. | Smith R. Making progress with competing interests.
BMJ 2002; 325: 1375-1376 |
| 2. | Chaudhry S, Schroter S, Smith R, Morris J. Does
declaration of competing interests affect readers' perceptions? A
randomised trial. BMJ 2002; 325: 1391-1392 |
Authors' reply
EDITOR
Medical researchers like Senn are often very
concerned about minor deception, but its use is common in the social sciences.
We at the BMJ have debated the use of deception with our ethics
committee, and it sees no problem so long as the deception is
minor, the study would be hard or impossible to do in any other way,
and participants are informed afterwards.
We agree with Kristiansen that all forms of financial
and
non-financial
conflict of interest are important. Our anxiety is
not only about commercial sponsorship, and we have had examples
in Britain of the government trying to interfere with the publication
of research. We disagree, however, with the implication in Kristiansen's
letter that the use of scientific principles can avoid the influence
of conflicts of interest. The evidence suggests otherwise.
There are strong arguments against editors publishing original research in
their own journals and egregious examples
from Cyril Burt and
Hans Eysenck
of editors publishing highly dubious research in their own
journals. Nevertheless, it makes sense for editors to try to publish
in their own journals when the research is conducted on readers,
authors, or reviewers associated with the journals and the results
influence the policies of the journals.
That was the case with this research, and we do have a declared method of
reviewing research submitted to the BMJ by the editorial staff
that excludes editors employed by the journal at every stage. And we
have had several papers rejected.
Richard Smith
Sara Schroter
BMJ, London WC1H 9JR
© 2003 BMJ
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