Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Medical_ghostwriter> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 19 of
19
with 100 items per page.
- Medical_ghostwriter abstract "The American Medical Writers Association speaks to the topic as follows:"Ghost authoring" refers to making substantial contributions without being identified as an author. "Guest authoring" refers to being named as an author without having made substantial contributions. "Ghostwriting" refers to assisting in presenting the author's work without being acknowledged. The term "ghostwriting" is often used to encompass all three of these practices.With medical ghostwriting, professional writers and other parties are paid — commonly (but by no means always) by pharmaceuticals and medical devices manufacturers — to produce manuscripts for conference presentations, scientific publications, explicitly promotional distributions, patient education materials, continuing professional education activities' contents, and other communications. In the pharmaceuticals and medical devices industries, physicians and other scientists are frequently[citation needed] permitted or paid to attach their names to these manuscripts, which are then promulgated at meetings, distributed to patients and caregivers, presented as marketing instruments, or published in textbooks and medical journals. These scientists or physicians may have little involvement in the research or the writing process.The rules for authorship and contribution of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE, informally known as "the Vancouver Group" from the locale of the group's first meeting, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) are a single, universally-respected set of guidelines for describing authorship of and contribution to professional medical publications. The document "International Committee of Medical Journal Editors: Authorship and Contributorship" is considered the definitive statement of ethical requirements for how authorship in medical journal articles (the prime forum for medical professional publication) and the degree to which a given writer is deemed to have contributed to the content of a medical journal article are determined. This document contains a succinct statement of the rules for determining authorship of and contributorship to medical journal articles:"Byline AuthorsAn “author” is generally considered to be someone who has made substantive intellectual contributions to a published study, and biomedical authorship continues to have important academic, social, and financial implications. An author must take responsibility for at least one component of the work, should be able to identify who is responsible for each other component, and should ideally be confident in their co-authors’ ability and integrity. In the past, readers were rarely provided with information about contributions to studies from persons listed as authors and in Acknowledgments. Some journals now request and publish information about the contributions of each person named as having participated in a submitted study, at least for original research. Editors are strongly encouraged to develop and implement a contributorship policy, as well as a policy on identifying who is responsible for the integrity of the work as a whole.While contributorship and guarantorship policies obviously remove much of the ambiguity surrounding contributions, they leave unresolved the question of the quantity and quality of contribution that qualify for authorship. The ICJME has recommended the following criteria for authorship; these criteria are still appropriate for journals that distinguish authors from other contributors.Authorship credit should be based on 1) substantial contributions to conception and design, acquisition of data, or analysis and interpretation of data; 2) drafting the article or revising it critically for important intellectual content; and 3) final approval of the version to be published. Authors should meet conditions 1, 2, and 3.When a large, multicenter group has conducted the work, the group should identify the individuals who accept direct responsibility for the manuscript. These individuals should fully meet the criteria for authorship/contributorship defined above, and editors will ask these individuals to complete journal-specific author and conflict-of-interest disclosure forms. When submitting a manuscript authored by a group, the corresponding author should clearly indicate the preferred citation and identify all individual authors as well as the group name. Journals generally list other members of the group in the Acknowledgments. The NLM indexes the group name and the names of individuals the group has identified as being directly responsible for the manuscript; it also lists the names of collaborators if they are listed in Acknowledgments.Acquisition of funding, collection of data, or general supervision of the research group alone does not constitute authorship.All persons designated as authors should qualify for authorship, and all those who qualify should be listed.Each author should have participated sufficiently in the work to take public responsibility for appropriate portions of the content.Some journals now also request that one or more authors, referred to as “guarantors,” be identified as the persons who take responsibility for the integrity of the work as a whole, from inception to published article, and publish that information.Increasingly, authorship of multicenter trials is attributed to a group. All members of the group who are named as authors should fully meet the above criteria for authorship/contributorship.The group should jointly make decisions about contributors/authors before submitting the manuscript for publication. The corresponding author/guarantor should be prepared to explain the presence and order of these individuals. It is not the role of editors to make authorship/contributorship decisions or to arbitrate conflicts related to authorship."Compliance with the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors' Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals is voluntary. A list of medical journals which have stated that they follow the Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals is maintained by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors with the following caveats:"The following is a list of journals whose editors or publishers have contacted the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE) to request listing as a journal that follows the ICMJE's Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals. The ICMJE cannot verify the completeness or accuracy of this list. There may be some journals that follow the ICMJE recommendations, but have never requested listing. There may be some listed journals that do not follow all of the many recommendations and policies in the document."How closely individual medical journals and authors of medical journal articles comply with ICMJE guidelines is a largely self-policed matter. The ICMJE document "Uniform Requirements for Manuscripts Submitted to Biomedical Journals:Publishing and Editorial Issues Related to Publication in Biomedical Journals: Corrections, Retractions and "Expressions of Concern" " is the section of the ICMJE Uniform Requirements laying out guidelines for how potential or actual scientific error and scientific fraud ought to be dealt with. It refers readers to the relevant guidelines from the Committee for Publication Ethics (COPE) - specifically COPE's flowcharts outlining a systematic approach toward scientific error and possible fraud.".
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink All%20Flowcharts%20English%2017%20July%202012.pdf.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink guidelines.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink ethical_1author.html.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink journals.html.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink publishing_2corrections.html.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageExternalLink urm_main.html.
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageID "23883900".
- Medical_ghostwriter wikiPageRevisionID "592463991".
- Medical_ghostwriter hasPhotoCollection Medical_ghostwriter.
- Medical_ghostwriter subject Category:Medical_journalism.
- Medical_ghostwriter subject Category:Medical_research.
- Medical_ghostwriter comment "The American Medical Writers Association speaks to the topic as follows:"Ghost authoring" refers to making substantial contributions without being identified as an author. "Guest authoring" refers to being named as an author without having made substantial contributions. "Ghostwriting" refers to assisting in presenting the author's work without being acknowledged.".
- Medical_ghostwriter label "Medical ghostwriter".
- Medical_ghostwriter sameAs m.076ym8m.
- Medical_ghostwriter sameAs Q6806538.
- Medical_ghostwriter sameAs Q6806538.
- Medical_ghostwriter wasDerivedFrom Medical_ghostwriter?oldid=592463991.
- Medical_ghostwriter isPrimaryTopicOf Medical_ghostwriter.