| Literature DB >> 26479237 |
Ana Raquel Martins1, Nuno Henrique Franco2.
Abstract
Animal research is not only regulated by legislation but also by self-regulatory mechanisms within the scientific community, which include biomedical journals' policies on animal use. For editorial policies to meaningfully impact attitudes and practice, they must not only be put into effect by editors and reviewers, but also be set to high standards. We present a novel tool to classify journals' policies on animal use-the EXEMPLAR scale-as well as an analysis by this scale of 170 journals publishing studies on animal models of three human diseases: Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Type-1 Diabetes and Tuberculosis. Results show a much greater focus of editorial policies on regulatory compliance than on other domains, suggesting a transfer of journals' responsibilities to scientists, institutions and regulators. Scores were not found to vary with journals' impact factor, country of origin or antiquity, but were, however, significantly higher for open access journals, which may be a result of their greater exposure and consequent higher public scrutiny.Entities:
Keywords: EXEMPLAR scale; animal ethics; animal research; animal welfare; editorial policies
Year: 2015 PMID: 26479237 PMCID: PMC4494415 DOI: 10.3390/ani5020315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
The Excellence in Editorial Mandatory Policies for Animal Research (EXEMPLAR) scale.
| EXEMPLAR Scale | Score | |
|---|---|---|
| Authors must attest of prior ethical approval of animal studies, or an analogous project evaluation process involving harm-benefit appraisal, (e.g., by providing documental evidence or ethics review board process reference) and include a statement of compliance with relevant legislation and national, international or institutional guidelines on animal care and use. | ||
| Authors must declare: | Ethical approval of studies or analogous evaluation process by competent authority, institutional animal care and use committee, animal welfare body or equivalent. | 2 |
| Compliance with relevant national, international or institutional guidelines on animal care and use. | 1 | |
| Compliance with relevant legislation on the use of animals. | 1 | |
| Journal refers authors to relevant guidelines on the quality of reporting of animal studies (e.g., ARRIVE guidelines, Gold Standard Publication Checklist, or other) | ||
| Authors must include information regarding: | Animals (e.g., sex, age, genotype, background, supplier, acclimatization period,
| 1 |
| Experimental conditions (e.g., housing, lighting, temperature, feeding regime, environmental enrichment,
| 1 | |
| Experimental design and statistics | 1 | |
| Experimental procedures and outcomes | 1 | |
| Journal demands that the methods described are coherent with best principles and practice on the ethical treatment of animals in research, e.g., by demanding strict compliance with relevant guidelines on animal care and use, the 3Rs for
| ||
| Authors must: | state the rationale for choosing the animal model(s) used | 1 |
| report the impact of the experiment on animal health and wellbeing | 1 | |
| describe any measures to minimize harm (e.g., anesthetics, analgesics, humane endpoints) and/or improve the wellbeing of animals (e.g., husbandry adaptations for more vulnerable animals) | 1 | |
| justify the necessity of any unrelieved pain, suffering or distress inflicted | 1 | |
| Meeting journal standards on animal ethics care and welfare is indispensable for manuscript acceptance and/or publication. Studies raising serious concerns over animal welfare, or presenting significant discrepancies between the approved protocol and methods described may be reported to the institution or committee responsible for ethical approval. | ||
| Studies raising serious ethical concerns (e.g., serious neglect regarding animal welfare or unjustifiable suffering considering the value of the experiment) may be rejected by editors or reviewers. | 3 | |
| Journal states specific procedure(s) that will not be accepted for publication (e.g., use of muscle relaxants or paralytic drugs alone for surgery, severe lesion/trauma without anesthesia, or death as an endpoint) | 1 | |
Figure 1Schematic representation of the search and selection process, with the search for journals publishing studies on Type 1 Diabetes (T1D) being presented as an example. One of the journals from the T1D sample was later excluded because their editorial polices stated that it did not publish studies on animal models, leaving a final sample size of 44 journals.
Figure 2Topics covered by the journals in the sample (of the three selected). Journals publishing studies in more than one of the selected fields (n = 18) included two journals publishing papers on T1D and ALS, one journal publishing on Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Tuberculosis (TB), ten journals publishing on both T1D and TB and five journals publishing papers on all three fields, between 2011–2013.
Figure 3EXEMPLAR score distribution for the whole sample (Figure 3A; N = 170) and by field of research [Figure 3B, with 18 journals publishing studies in more than one field excluded; n(ALS) = 76; n(T1D) = 27; n(TB) = 49)]. The median score for the whole sample (N = 170) was 4 points, whereas the mean scores for ALS, T1D and TB were, respectively 4.45 (SD = 3.15), 4.52 (SD = 3.286) and 4.20 (SD = 3.54).
Figure 4Scores for Categories A, B, C and D, for each. Journals publishing in more than one of the selected fields (n = 18) not shown [n(ALS) = 76; n(T1D) = 27; n(TB) = 49)].
Figure 5The mean “Osborne score” for journals with the same EXEMPLAR classification, with an overlaid best-fit regression line (R2 = 0.39). Error bars represent ± 1 standard deviation of the mean for “Osborne score”, for a confidence interval of 95%. No journal was classified with an EXEMPLAR score of 17, 18 or 19 points. Correlation was stronger (Pearson’s r = 0.736), for lower scoring journals (under 10 points in the EXEMPLAR scale, corresponding to 91% of the sample).
Figure 6The proportion of open access journals with an ES ≥ 8 is significantly higher than that of subscription-based journals.