POLICIES, PRACTICES, AND ATTITUDES OF NORTH-AMERICAN MEDICAL JOURNAL EDITORS

被引:67
作者
WILKES, MS
KRAVITZ, RL
机构
[1] the Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Services Research, University of California, Los Angeles, School of Medicine, Los Angeles
[2] the Division of General Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, California
关键词
MEDICAL JOURNALS; EDITORS; PHARMACEUTICAL ADVERTISEMENTS; PUBLISHING; PEER REVIEW; INFORMATION DISSEMINATION;
D O I
10.1007/BF02599916
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
OBJECTIVE: To describe U.S. and Canadian medical journals, their editors, and policies that affect the dissemination of medical information. DESIGN: Mailed survey. PARTICIPANTS: Senior editors of all 269 leading medical journals published at least quarterly in the United States and Canada, of whom 221 (82%) responded. MAIN MEASURES: The questionnaire asked about characteristics of journal editors and their journals and about journals' policies toward peer review, conflicts of interest, prepublication discussions with the press, and pharmaceutical advertisements. RESULTS: The editors were overwhelmingly men (96%), middle-aged (mean age 61 years), and trained as physicians (82%), Although 98% claimed that their journals were ''peer-reviewed,'' the editors differed in how they defined a ''peer'' and in the number of peers they deemed optimal for review, Sixty-three percent thought journals should check on reviewers' potential conflicts of interest, but only a minority supported masking authors' names and affiliations (46%), checking reviewers' financial conflicts of interest (40%), or revealing reviewers' names to authors (8%), The respondents advocated discussion of scientific findings with the press (84%), but only in accord with the Ingelfinger rule, i.e., after publication of the article (77%). Fifty-seven percent of the editors agreed that journals have a responsibility to ensure the truthfulness of pharmaceutical advertisements, and 40% favored subjecting advertisements to the same rigorous peer review as scientific articles. CONCLUSIONS: The responding editors were relatively homogeneous demographically and professionally, and they tended to support the editorial status quo. There was little sentiment in favor of tampering with the current peer-review system (however defined) or the Ingelfinger rule, but a surprisingly large percentage of the respondents favored more stringent review of drug advertisements.
引用
收藏
页码:443 / 450
页数:8
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