We regret to inform the readers that Pharmacy Practice suffered from a plagiarism case.
After an author's complaint, our internal investigation concluded that the article
authored by Radhakrishnan RAJESH, Sudha VIDYASAGAR, Krishnadas NANDAKUMAR, entitled
"Highly active antiretroviral therapy induced adverse drug reactions in Indian
human immunodeficiency virus positive patients", and published on Pharm Pract
(Internet) 2011;9(1):48-55 (deliberately not included in this editorial's
references), plagiarized a complainant's article.1Following the Committee of Publication Ethics plagiarism flowchart2, we contacted the authors'; institution, the Principal of
Manipal College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, communicating our concern. Few days later,
we received a satisfactory resolution from the institution' Scientific Misconduct
Enquiry Committee. Additionally, offended author and editors-in-chief of the original
publication journal and editors-in-chief of peer journals were also informed."There is nothing more debilitating in a journal editor's life than to be
involved in a discussion of a case of scientific misconduct".3 The "publish or perish" threat was summarized long time
ago by the statement: "In order to receive grants or promotions it is necessary for
them [researchers] to keep their names in print over articles".4 Unethical shortcuts exist, and unfortunately, journal editors have to act
as cops.After this first case of publication fraud identified in Pharmacy Practice, we establish
a procedure to check all manuscripts for potential plagiarism prior to the external
peer-review process. Through this investigative process we have learnt a lot. However,
we also identified some pitfalls in the plagiarism concept.Plagiarism is a concept without a clear definition. Plagiarism is “the presentation of
another person’s words, work, or ideas as one’s own”.5 However,
"how much textual similarity raises the suspicion of plagiarism?"6 Something seems to be clear: the plagiarism offender treacherously
steals the work of the offended author. From this point of view, using the term
‘self-plagiarism’ may be unhelpful. This term is not only an oxymoron7, but also may conceal the burden of the real plagiarism fraud. Authors
cannot steal their own intellectual property. They may fall into a different publication
fraud named as ‘redundant publication’ by the International Committee of Medical Journal
Editors.8Plagiarism seems to be a very common issue in academic publishing, and it produces an
important number of journal pages. To date, more than 740 articles are indexed in Pubmed
using 'plagiarism' as Medical Subject Heading, and more than 400 use the word
plagiarism in their titles. Even top leading journals recognized suffering from
plagiarism cases.To reduce the plagiarism and avoid its generalization different solutions have been
suggested. Identifying plagiarism is a difficult task. Some text-similarity search
engines were developed, demonstrating good results on plagiarism identification. These
tools use abstracts indexed in Pubmed to check for similar publications. Two concerns
should be taken into account: are we creating a new generation of plagiarism offenders
with expertise on getting past these engines?9 And, second, what
about journals not indexed in Pubmed? Unethical authors may plagiarize articles from
those journals, and they will never be identified. This is another reason for the need
of the International Catalogue of Scientific literature.10Obviously, the first action after identifying any publication fraud consists on
retracting the article. Retracting does not mean deleting, but flagging the article in
databases and webpages as retracted. This could be a simple task if only one database
existed and the article was available through one webpage only. The lack of
effectiveness of this process is evident, since retracted articles are being cited even
after the retraction.11 This is even more difficult for open
access journals, with an open self-archiving policy. How many library databases and
secondary sources and how many repositories have recorded the article since it was
published until the retraction is effective?And finally, what to do with dishonest authors after a plagiarism case? It seems that
plagiarism offenders tend to repeat the fraud.12 "Scientific
fraud, in its many manifestations, is no different from any other form of fraud and
should be dealt with as such with appropriate penalties".13
The Committee of Publication Ethics plagiarism flowchart does not provide other action
than "inform": inform victims, inform readers, inform offender institution.
And, what else? Conversely, some countries have established strict policies and
penalties for dishonest authors.14Not only plagiarism, but all types of scientific misconduct constitute a frequent and
serious problem that we all should be aware of and address together.
Authors: George P Chrousos; Sophia N Kalantaridou; Andrew N Margioris; Achille Gravanis Journal: Eur J Clin Invest Date: 2012-01-24 Impact factor: 4.686