| Literature DB >> 26257520 |
Rachel Anne Kornhaber1, Loyola M McLean2, Rodney J Baber3.
Abstract
Health professionals publishing within the field of health sciences continue to experience issues concerning appropriate authorship, which have clinical, ethical, and academic implications. This integrative review sought to explore the key issues concerning authorship from a bioethical standpoint, aiming to explore the key features of the authorship debate. Studies were identified through an electronic search, using the PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), and Scopus databases of peer-reviewed research, published between 2009 and 2014, limited to English language research, with search terms developed to reflect the current issues of authorship. From among the 279 papers identified, 20 research papers met the inclusion criteria. Findings were compiled and then arranged to identify themes and relationships. The review incorporated a wide range of authorship issues encompassing equal-credited authors, honorary (guest/gift) and ghost authorship, perception/experiences of authorship, and guidelines/policies. This review suggests that the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors' (ICMJE) recommended guidelines for authorship are not reflected in current authorship practices within the domain of health sciences in both low-and high-impact-factor journals. This devaluing of the true importance of authorship has the potential to affect the validity of authorship, diminish the real contributions of the true authors, and negatively affect patient care.Entities:
Keywords: ICMJE; authorship; bioethics; equal credit; ghost; honorary
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26257520 PMCID: PMC4525802 DOI: 10.2147/IJN.S87585
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nanomedicine ISSN: 1176-9114
Figure 1Decision trail of included studies describing the ethical concerns of authorship.
Overview of studies included in our review describing the ethical concerns regarding authorship
| Author/s, year, and country | Purpose | Sample | Significant finding/s and outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Akhabue and Lautenbach | Identify longitudinal trends and characteristics of explicitly giving authors equal credit in publications in medical journals | Primary research manuscripts with equal-credited authors (ECA) published between 2000 and 2009 in the five general medicine journals with the highest impact factors | The first two authors listed in the by-line received equal credit the majority of the time; however the practice was also applied to authors in nearly every position in the by-line; none of the journals review had a detailed ECA policy. |
| Al-Herz et al | Determine the prevalence of honorary authorship in biomedical publications and identify the factors that lead to its existence | Corresponding authors (n=1,246) of articles published in different biomedical journals in PubMed over a year | 33.4% of authors admitted adding people who did not deserve authorship credit; rationales encompassed complimentary (39.4%), avoiding conflict (16.1%), and facilitating acceptance (7.2%); journal specialty, geography, impact factor, and number of authors were significantly associated with honorary authorship; 75% of authors would remove unjustified names |
| Bonekamp et al | Determine the prevalence of honorary authorship in the American Journal of Roentgenology (AJR) and evaluate factors that might influence the perception of honorary authorship | Corresponding authors (n=490) of primary research manuscripts published in AJR in the period 2003–2010 | 399 authors were unaware of ICMJE, 41 followed no guidelines; 39 departmental guidelines; 91 stated senior members automatically listed, 65% thought this justified; 121 perceived one or more listed made limited authorship contributions; 340 claimed first authorship, drafted manuscript conveying limited information of co-authors |
| Eisenberg et al | Quantify the frequency of perceived honorary authorship and identify specific factors that increase the prevalence within radiology journals | First authors (n=392) of articles published in radiology journals between July 2006 and June 2009 | 102 first authors perceived one or more made insufficient contribution to merit authorship; 231 stated one or more performed non author ICMJE roles; perceptions of honorary authorship higher with authors who did not follow journal requirements; 96 authors stated departmental head was automatically listed. |
| Eisenberg et al | Quantify the potential effects of geographic factors on the frequency of honorary authorship in radiology journals | First authors (n=328) of papers published in radiology journals between July 2006 and June 2009 | 91 first authors perceived at least one co-author made limited contributions; 245 unaware of honorary authorship; Asia/Europe experienced greater perception of honorary authorship than North America with departmental heads automatically listed. |
| Ghajarzadeh | Evaluates the number of authors fulfilling ICMJE authorship criteria and determines the type of contribution | Researchers’ names (n=296; 128 original manuscripts) with at least two authors published in Archives of Iranian Medicine, 2005–2007 | 186 met authorship criteria; 110 were identified as guest authors, 97 of whom qualified to be mentioned in the acknowledgments; order of authors was mainly determined by corresponding authors and secondly by the first author; only 31 authors had read the ICMJE criteria |
| Ivaniš et al | Assess the association between authors’ perceived importance of contributions and participation in manuscripts | Authors (n=1,014; 235 manuscripts), July 2005–March 2006 | 765 authors were identified as qualifying under the ICMJE ranking contribution categories higher than non – qualifying authors; attitudes towards authorship criteria were related to authors’ contribution for the preparation of the manuscript. |
| Li et al | Investigate the prevalence and characteristics of designating ECA | Primary research manuscripts given equal credit in three anesthesia journals, 2002–2011 | Increasing trend in proportion of manuscripts with ECA; first 2 authors had ECA in the majority of cases; the last two authors was the second most common; Western Europe largest ECA’s followed by Asia and USA; No clear reference to ECA’s in their guidelines. |
| Malicki et al | Assess how authors describe their contribution to submitted manuscripts without reference to or requirement to satisfy authorship criteria of the ICMJE | Responses of authors (n=1,282) who submitted manuscripts (n=335) to Croatian Medical Journal, March 2009–July 2010, transcribed and matched to ICMJE criteria | 87% responses matched to ICMJE; 38.6% met ICMJE criteria for research/writing; 31.8% declared conducting research; 9.4% writing; of these, 56.3% stated significant contributions without justification. 13% could not be match to ICMJE; manuscripts > 8 authors declared more contributions than manuscripts < 8 authors. |
| McDonald et al | Determine whether editorial policies are designed to eliminate gratuitous authorship | 16 medical journals – eight with explicit authorship guidelines and eight without formal authorship policies (n=307; 190 manuscripts), 1986–2006 | Significant trend toward increasing authorship for nearly all journals reviewed; implementation of authorship limitation policies was not significant and does not slow the trend of increasing numbers of authors per manuscript over time |
| Mirzazadeh et al | Investigate the prevalence of ghost and honorary authors and its determinant factors among Iranian biomedical journals | First or corresponding authors (n=536 authors; 124 manuscripts) published in Iran Journal of Public Health, Journal of Kerman University of Medical Sciences, and Tehran University Medical Journal | 56.1% were identified as honorary authors according to ICMJE criteria; approximately 55% of listed authors were honorary authors; 89% of manuscripts had had at least one honorary author and 20% had >3; 21.43% admitted they had been omitted as authors (ghost) |
| Nylenna et al | Attitudes and practices of scientific authorship at a university hospital and medical school in Norway | Faculty, researchers, and PhD students at Oslo University Hospital and the Medical Faculty, University of Oslo (n=654) | 97% had knowledge of authorship; 68% regarded breaches as misconduct; <5 publications more likely to regard breaches as misconduct than >50; 58% in authorship disputes; 29% excluded despite perceived merit; 36% experienced pressure from undeserving authors; researchers with <6 years’ experience found authorship difficult. |
| O’Brien et al | Examine the perception of honorary coauthorship among medical academics and determine whether a potential effect of honorary coauthorship affects patient care | Corresponding authors (n=127) of every fourth primary research paper in JAMA (2001–2003), CMAJ (2001–2003), BMJ (1998–2000), and Lancet (1998–2000) | 52% listed an honorary co-author in their career; 18% listed authors with commercial relationships; negative effects of honorary authorship included personal liability for honorary authors (29%) co-author contribution dilution (54%); 62% stated honorary co-authorship may negatively affect patient care; 2% stated this phenomenon occurred. |
| Rajasekaran et al | Estimate the prevalence of perceived honorary authorship and ICMJE-defined honorary authorship within physical medicine and rehabilitation literature | First authors (n=1,182) of three major physical medicine and rehabilitation journals, January 2009–December 2011 | Perceived and ICMJE- defined honorary authorship 18.0% and 55.2% respectively; the most senior author deciding the authorship order; living outside North America was independently associated with ICMJE- defined honorary authorship; most senior author deciding authorship order was associated with ICMJE- defined honorary authorship |
| Resnik and Master | Determine the percentage of journals that have authorship policies and describe the different provisions contained in journal author policies | Authorship policies of 30 bioethics journals | 63.3% of bioethics journals no guidance on authorship; 36.7% guidance on contributions meriting authorship; 23.3% on contributions that do not merit authorship; 23.3% require responsibility for contributions/article; 20% provided guidance on which contributions merit acknowledgment but not authorship; 6.7% required description of contributions. |
| Street et al | To explore the experiences of research publications and views on the responsibilities of authorship. | Health care researchers’ (n=17) experiences and perspectives of the guidelines, regulations, organizational structures, and cultures, which underpin norms of behavior in publication of health research | Drafting, seniority and supervision were attributions of authorship; gift authorship seen as maintaining relationships, a reward, increase a paper’s credibility or collaboration; perceptions differed markedly between disciplines; power differentials concerning authorship were common; little or no discussion about assignation of author order. |
| Vinther andRosenberg | Assess Danish authors’ general authorship experiences and views on authorship and authorship criteria | Authors (n=292) of articles published in Ugeskrift for Læger and Danish Medical Journal in 2010, coauthors and contributors, general authorship experiences, and views on authorship and authorship criteria | Authorship order by size of contribution 38%; 22% determined by first author and 11% last author; others alphabetically; 84% knew about ICMJE; 75% agreed fulfillment of ICMJE; 17% offered gift authorship; 16% invited to gift authorship themselves; 29% had experienced ghost authorship. |
| Wang et al | Investigate the prevalence and characteristics of designating two or more authors as having “contributed equally” in the area of critical care | Original research articles with ECAs published in the period 2001–2010 in four major journals of critical care medicine | Increasing trend in yearly prevalence of ECA for all the journals; first 2 authors received equal credit in the majority of cases, and found in nearly every position in the by-line; none of the 4 journals reviewed provided guidance to authors concerning equal credit. |
| Wislar et al | Assess the prevalence of honorary and ghost authors in leading general medical journals between 1996 and 2008 | Corresponding authors (n=896) who published in six general medical journals with high impact factors in 2008 | Honorary authorship or ghost authorship was 21.0%;; prevalence of honorary authorship was 25.0% in original research reports, 15.0% in reviews, and 11.2% in editorials, whereas the prevalence of ghost authorship was 11.9% in research articles, 6.0% in reviews, and 5.3% in editorials. |
| Zbar and Frank | Identify common perceptions of authorship position in the medical research community | First, last, and one randomly selected author in between (n=362) of articles with at least three authors published in 2007 from ten prominent general medical journals and 20 other randomly selected journals | 1.1% identified ICMJE; authors stated data acquisition/analysis and interpretation was responsibility of first vs last author; revisions/approval to be first and last authors’ responsibility; first author viewed 7 times likely involved with study/writing; last authors 7 times likely viewed as limited contribution/senior position. |
Abbreviations: BMJ, British Medical Journal; CMAJ, Canadian Medical Association Journal; ICMJE, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors; JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association; ECA, equal-credited authors.
ICMJE criteria: defining the role of authors and contributors
| 1 | Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work |
| 2 | Drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content |
| 3 | Final approval of the version to be published |
| 4 | Agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved |
Abbreviation: ICMJE, International Committee of Medical Journal Editors.