Journal of Medical Case Reports' policy on consent for publication
نویسندگان
چکیده
Journal of Medical Case Reports was launched with the aim of increasing the publication of case reports in the medical literature, because accurate reports of clinical experience are an essential part of the continued development of modern medicine [1]. All the journal's content is highly visible as it is available freely by online open access and indexed in a number of bibliographic databases. With transparency comes responsibility, and we are therefore revising our policy on obtaining consent to publish from the people described in case reports published in the journal to further enhance the protection of privacy. The practice of obtaining informed consent from people who participate in research has long been established; obtaining informed consent to publish information about individuals is a more recent, but increasingly accepted, concept, which has been embraced by our journal. An individual's right to privacy is ingrained in the laws of numerous countries, and protection of information obtained as part of the clinician-patient relationship is an essential part of many of the codes of ethics and professional conduct followed by clinicians, researchers, journal editors and publishers around the world [2-4]. The relevant privacy legislation in the United Kingdom, where Journal of Medical Case Reports is published, is the Data Protection Act [5]. A key consideration as to whether the Act applies to published articles is whether the data being presented are "personal" or not. If published information is anonymous to the extent that the individual concerned (or anyone who knows them) cannot identify themselves from the published article then the Act does not apply. The Act does also not apply to deceased individuals. In research involving groups of individuals, the clinical data being analyzed are likely to be presented in summary or aggregated form, and so it may be possible to confidently remove risks to privacy. But this is not possible for medical case reports as these provide detailed descriptions of an individual's medical history. Journal of Medical Case Reports has always striven to protect privacy, and maintains its endorsement of the privacy policies of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors [2] and the Committee on Publication Ethics [3]. Therefore we have required that authors obtain signed consent for publication for all case reports submitted to the journal, except for rare examples where authors have been able to demonstrate that the person and/or their next of kin are deceased or impossible to trace. But obtaining consent to publish does not circumvent the need to protect anonymity. The codes of ethics followed by Journal of Medical Case Reports go further than data protection legislation in that they require that consent be obtained and that only information scientifically relevant to the case being presented be published. So even in the presence of consent, authors and editors are required to ensure that non-essential, and possibly identifying, information about individuals is not included in case reports. Moreover, we have always required that privacy of deceased people is protected and that, wherever possible, consent of the person's next of kin be sought. We recognize that it is not always possible to obtain consent. Where people and their families are non-traceable, deceased, or both, we have provided criteria for publication without consent, which includes ensuring case reports are anonymous. However, it is clear that articles including three or more indirect identifiers relating to an individual could, theoretically, present risks to privacy [6,7]. To be of value to our readers, a case report published in Journal of Medical Case Reports must include at a minimum the age, gender and ethnicity of the individual described in the case report (plus many other clinical details in the majority of reports). Therefore, our policy on obtaining consent to publish is now mandatory for all cases that relate to a living individual. For case reports that relate to a deceased person, * Correspondence: [email protected]
منابع مشابه
Informed consent for case reports: the ethical dilemma of right to privacy versus pedagogical freedom.
A new international standard of editorial policy calls for written informed consent by the subject of every case report. Although this appears to be ethically appealing, the authors posit that in some situations, requesting informed consent may be unethical, can harm patients, and may erode the use of case reports as a valuable teaching method in psychiatry and psychotherapy. The authors discus...
متن کاملIntroductory editorial to 30th anniversary edition
We are highly privileged to write this editorial at such a significant moment for the Medical Journal of the Islamic Republic of Iran (MJIRI) as this journal celebrates its 30- year tradition as an accessible source of scholarly articles on the basic and clinical medical sciences, rigorously edited, and progressive. The MJIRI was launched by Iran National Center for Scientific Research ...
متن کاملPublication Ethics: A Case Series with Recommendations According to Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE)
Ethical misconduct is not a new issue in the history of science and literature. However, ethical misconducts in science have grown considerably in the modern era which is due to emphasis on the scientific proliferation in research institutes and gauging scientists according to their publications. In the current case series, several misconducts occurring over the previous years in Mashhad Univer...
متن کاملAutonomy suspended: using female patients to teach intimate exams without their knowledge or consent.
Recent reports of medical students performing pelvic exams for training purposes on anesthetized women without their consent have produced a firestorm of controversy and calls for greater regulation. Despite periodic efforts to reform the practice, such unauthorized practice is neither a recent phenomenon nor unique to the United States. Two small-scale studies published in 2003 hint at the ext...
متن کاملPublication of medical case reports and consent
The Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) published guidance on consent for publishing medical case reports in 2016 [1]. Paragraph 26 of the Declaration of Helsinki version 7 2013 states the following [2]: ‘In medical research involving human subjects capable of giving informed consent, each potential subject must be adequately informed of the aims, methods, sources of funding, any possible co...
متن کامل