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Published in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 2/2019

Open Access 01-06-2019 | Critical Perspectives

Editors Should Declare Conflicts of Interest

Authors: Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva, Judit Dobránszki, Radha Holla Bhar, Charles T. Mehlman

Published in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | Issue 2/2019

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Abstract

Editors have increasing pressure as scholarly publishing tries to shore up trust and reassure academics and the public that traditional peer review is robust, fail-safe, and corrective. Hidden conflicts of interest (COIs) may skew the fairness of the publishing process because they could allow the status of personal or professional relationships to positively influence the outcome of peer review or reduce the processing period of this process. Not all authors have such privileged relationships. In academic journals, editors usually have very specialized skills and are selected as agents of trust, entrusted with the responsibility of serving as quality control gate-keepers during peer review. In many cases, editors form extensive networks, either with other professionals, industry, academic bodies, journals, or publishers. Such networks and relationships may influence their decisions or even their subjectivity towards a set of submitting authors, paper, or institute, ultimately influencing the peer review process. These positions and relationships are not simply aspects of a curriculum, they are potential COIs. Thus, on the editorial board of all academic journals, editors should carry a COI statement that reflects their past history, as well as actual relationships and positions that they have, as these may influence their editorial functions.
Footnotes
4
Curiously, one of the PLOS Medicine editors when the COI policy was drafted, was Virginia Barbour, emphasizing the notion that rules were created by a small group of individuals that overlapped several organizations (COPE, WAME) and publishers.
 
5
This advice might be viewed with caution as various members, past and present, within these three organizations are closely linked or have apparent relationships or dealings in editorial boards or ethics associations, so there is a real potential professional COI in this suggestion made by Ruff.
 
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Metadata
Title
Editors Should Declare Conflicts of Interest
Authors
Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva
Judit Dobránszki
Radha Holla Bhar
Charles T. Mehlman
Publication date
01-06-2019
Publisher
Springer Singapore
Published in
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry / Issue 2/2019
Print ISSN: 1176-7529
Electronic ISSN: 1872-4353
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11673-019-09908-2

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