Reviewing the Reviewers Potential Financial Conflicts of Interest in Editorial Boards of Surgery Journals
Autor: | Amanpreet Brar, Sunil V. Patel, Basheer Elsolh, Bishal Gyawali |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Finance
medicine.medical_specialty Impact factor Conflict of Interest business.industry Industry funding media_common.quotation_subject Background data Disclosure Editorial board Medicare Payment Transparency (behavior) United States Surgery Cross-Sectional Studies Humans Medicine Periodicals as Topic business Publication Aged media_common |
Zdroj: | Annals of Surgery. 276:e1089-e1094 |
ISSN: | 0003-4932 |
Popis: | OBJECTIVE To assess the prevalence, magnitude, and disclosure status of industry funding in editorial boards of surgery journals. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA Financial conflicts of interest (COI) can bias research. While authors seeking to publish in peer-reviewed surgery journals are required to provide COI disclosures, editorial board members' COI disclosures are generally not disclosed to readers. METHODS We present a cross-sectional analysis of industry funding to editorial board members of high-impact surgery journals. We reviewed top US-based surgery journals by impact factor to determine the presence of financial COI in members of each journal's editorial board. The prevalence and magnitude of COI was determined using 2018 industry reported payments found in the CMS Open Payments database. Journal websites were also reviewed looking for the presence of editorial board disclosure statements. RESULTS A total of 1,002 names of editorial board members from the top 10 high-impact American surgery journals were identified. Of 688 individual physicians based in the USA, 452 (65.7%) were found to have received industry payments in 2018, totaling $21,916,503 with a median funding amount per physician of $1,253 (IQR $156 - $10,769). Funding levels varied by surgical specialty and journal. Editorial board disclosure information was found in only 3.3% of physicians. CONCLUSIONS Industry funding to editorial board members of high impact surgery journals is prevalent and underreported. Mechanisms of disclosure for COI are needed at the editorial board level to provide readers full transparency. This would acknowledge this COI of editorial board members, and thereby attempt to potentially further reduce the risk of bias in editorial decisions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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