How
to cite: Mandoli, DF 2004 The Bioethics Imperative XVIII
Consequences of Unethical Conduct, Part 1
ASPB News. September/October, 31(5): 23
http://www.aspb.org/newsletter/septoct04/14mandoli18.cfm |
BIOETHICS
The
Bioethics Imperative XVIII
Consequences
of Unethical Conduct, Part 1
Mokita:
The truth we all know and agree not to talk about. Papua New
Guinea.
Scenario: In a
proposal you are reviewing for a federal funding agency, you find data
that are not those of the Principal Investigator who authored this proposal,
but unpublished data generated by you and your collaborators. The source
of these data is not credited, that is, there is no mention of a personal
communication and no citation of a publication either, all of which
implies that these data are those of the author. The data are central
to the core of the proposal. You e-mail one of your collaborators, relate
the situation, and ask for input. This colleague is angry at the news
and then becomes frustrated when you refuse to say who wrote the proposal
in order to guard the confidentiality of the author. You write a scathing
review of the proposal.
In the fictitious
scenario above, the ethical breach of the author was compounded by multiple
ethical breaches of the reviewer. Ethically, one is never at liberty to
discuss a proposal with others. E-mailing compounded the problem because
that is a public medium highly subject to search and review. Indeed, the
e-mail constituted gossip by the reviewer and his/her colleague. Not revealing
the name of the author was a band-aid to the mistake that served only
to irritate the colleague. Did the reviewer have a conflict of interest
in reviewing this proposal, or was she/he within ethical professional
boundaries?
Lets make plain
the underlying tension we all face as scientists and teachers: How do
we train and inform each other to handle ethical situations that arise
in peer review without compromising the need for confidentiality? If you
are like me and, I wager, most PIs you have never been formally trained
for peer review, one of our most important professional responsibilities.
Indeed, you may never have been trained how to review either a manuscript
or a proposal; you are just supposed to learn by doing or
by some form of osmosis. To remedy this issue, many graduate programs
now have Grants Writing Workshops for incoming graduate students
that often include peer reviews among class participants. Although a step
in the right direction, this is at best a circuitous approach to learning
how to handle ethical breaches in peer review.
Bob Cleland, a past
president of ASPB and professor at the University of Washington, designed
a graduate seminar course in which students read and review published
papers from the primary literature with an assigned role of author, reviewer,
or editor of the journal. The actual citation can be obscured and the
manuscript submitted to another journal of ones choosing.
The authors write a rebuttal to the critique of the reviewers,
and the editors arbiter the final acceptance decision. Surprisingly
often, authors and reviewers get into heated discussions
in defending their work! You can add a layer of complexity
by having a classic, high-impact paper submitted to an inappropriate
journal so that despite rave reviews the editor is forced
to reject it. I introduced this format to a Molecular and Cellular Biology
Program run by the UW medical school with the same suite of positive effects
on students: They said it imparted a sense of the ethical issues involved
in scientific reviewing and forced them to read the literature more deeply
and critically, to think and learn about the missions and profiles of
journals they read, and to become more gentle colleagues to others. From
the professors perspective, the writing of most of the students
also dramatically improved as they learned to craft and defend an argument.
The professors at UW who have used this teaching method learned how to
craft better reviews themselves and found that ethical issues surfaced
naturally during the course.
To explore other ways
of teaching ethics, see www.aaas.org
and search for ethics. The American Association for the Advancement
of Science (AAAS) has collated a wealth of information on ethics, including
ideas on how to teach it and how to deal with specific hot-button topics
such as religion and bioethics, evolution and bioethics, and the like
that arise in teaching. Centers devoted to ethics such as the Hastings
Center (www.thehastingscenter.org)
or the Poynter Center (http://www.indiana.edu/~poynter)
are also excellent resources.
Do we really have
to teach this stuff? How frequent are ethical breaches in manuscripts
and grant proposals? Unfortunately, far more frequent than any of us would
like to admit. Not a day goes by that I do not learn about several cases
via the news, scientific journals, or e-mail (witness the recent case
at Harvard University; see http://www.federalnewsradio.com/index.php?nid=80&sid=134809).
Every time a new, high-profile ethical breach occurs, scientistsall
of uslose credibility, and respect for the ivory tower erodes.
Indeed, in response
to the frequency of ethical breaches, most journals run by professional
societies, ASPB included, now have published policies for handling allegations
of ethical misconduct. Such breaches are not new, but the policies have
been instituted because there is growing awareness that the government
and the public expect us to train and police ourselves. In addition, there
is not a discrete higher authority, like a Program Project Officer, to
turn to for structured advice when such breaches arise in journals of
professional societies. Following normal ASPB procedures, the Societys
policies were carefully crafted by the Publications Committee during 2002
and 2003 in consultation with legal counsel. The Executive Committee then
discussed and edited a draft of the document. A final policy was ultimately
approved in October 2003 (http://www.aspb.org/publications/ethics.cfm).
Having touched on
the consequences of an ethical breach in publishing, next time we will
discuss consequences of a breach at the national level in a grant proposal.
Next time:
Government policies and consequences in bioethical issues, continued.
Dina Mandoli
mandoli@u.washington.edu
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