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Conflicts of interest disclosure policies among Chinese medical journals: A cross-sectional study.

Jiayi Zhu, +1 more
- 09 Jul 2019 - 
- Vol. 14, Iss: 7
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TLDR
There is a generic lack of standardized disclosure forms and management of COI policies in most journals, and of the journals that mentioned financial COIs most required nonfinancial COIs.
Abstract
Importance Conflicts of interest (COI) disclosure policies are critical to enhancing the integrity of research. However, it is unclear how Chinese medical journals interpret and enforce such policies. Objectives The goal of this investigation is to determine the current status of COI disclosure policy enforcement in Chinese medical journals and to promote comprehensive COI policies. Methods In this cross-sectional study conducted from September 1st to October 29th 2017, journal instructions, websites and print issues of journals indexed by the Core Journals of China (version 2014), in the medical and health sector, were reviewed to identify whether COI disclosure policies existed and how complete these policies were. Results Of 248 eligible journals, 78 (31%) mentioned COI policies; 9 (4%) applied standardized disclosure forms; 18 (7%) required disclosure statements in articles; 4 (2%) mentioned policy bases; none validated disclosed COIs; 2 (1%) mentioned how they dealt with breaches; 18 (7%) involved the management of disclosed COIs; and 62 (25%) and 55 (22%) noted financial and nonfinancial COIs, respectively. Seventy-eight journals (31%) mentioned COIs in research and authors' obligation towards disclosure; 2 (1%) and 6 (2%) mentioned family members' and institutional COIs, respectively. Twenty-two and 11 journals mentioned at least one form of financial and nonfinancial COI type in research, respectively. Seven journals (3%) required disclosure of the source of financial support in research, but no journals mentioned the amount of support. Seven (3%) and 12 (5%) journals mentioned COIs in the editorial process and peer-review, respectively. Clinical journals (45%) paid more attention to COI policies than non-clinical journals. Conclusions Approximately one-third of Chinese medical journals had COI policies, and of the journals that mentioned financial COIs most required nonfinancial COIs. However, the extent to which journals implemented COI policies was insufficient. There is a generic lack of standardized disclosure forms and management of COIs in most journals. The subject and details of COIs involved in the editorial and peer-review process received less attention than those in research.

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References
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Journal Article

Conflict of Interest in Medical Research, Education, and Practice

TL;DR: The Institute of Medicine’s Conflict of Interest in Medical Research, Education, and Practice makes an important contribution to the continuing debate about financial conflicts of interest in medicine and makes 16 recommendations for reforming medicine, some of which would require radical changes.
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Reporting financial conflicts of interest and relationships between investigators and research sponsors.

TL;DR: A more specific policy for reporting authors' financial conflicts of interest and a new policy for reported relationships between investigators and research sponsors are described.
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Requirements and Definitions in Conflict of Interest Policies of Medical Journals

TL;DR: In 2008, most medical journals with relatively high impact factors had author COI policies available for public review, and among journals, there was substantial variation in policies for solicitation of author COIs and in definitions of COI.
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Requirements of Clinical Journals for Authors' Disclosure of Financial and Non-Financial Conflicts of Interest: A Cross Sectional Study.

TL;DR: Financial COI disclosure was well defined by the majority of the journals, but many did not have clear policies on disclosure of non-financial COI, disclosure of financial COI of family members and institutions of the authors, and effect of disclosed COI or non-disclosure of COI on editorial policies.
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Financial, nonfinancial and editors' conflicts of interest in high-impact biomedical journals.

TL;DR: To assess financial, nonfinancial and editors' conflicts of interest (COI) disclosure policies among the most influential biomedical journals publishing original research, a database of more than 200 journals was constructed.
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