Abstract

BackgroundPublic health journals need to have clear policies for reporting the funding of studies and authors’ personal financial and non-financial conflicts of interest (COI) disclosures. This study aims to assess the policies of public health journals on reporting of study funding and the disclosure of authors’ COIs.MethodsThis is a cross-sectional study of “Public, Environmental & Occupational Health” journals. Teams of two researchers abstracted data in duplicate and independently using REDCap software.ResultsOf 173 public health journals, 155 (90%) had a policy for reporting study funding information. Out of these, a majority did not require reporting of the phase of the study for which funding was received (88%), nor the types of funding sources (87%). Of the 173 journals, 163 (94%) had a policy requiring disclosure of authors’ COI. However, the majority of these journals did not require financial conflicts of interest disclosures relating to institutions (75%) nor to the author’s family members (90%) while 56% required the disclosure of at least one form of non-financial COI.ConclusionsThe policies of the majority of public health journals do not require the reporting of important details such as the role of the funder, and non-financial COI. Journals and publishers should consider revising their editorial policies to ensure complete and transparent reporting of funding and COI.

Highlights

  • Public health journals need to have clear policies for reporting the funding of studies and authors’ personal financial and non-financial conflicts of interest (COI) disclosures

  • The two objectives of the study were to assess the policies of public health journals regarding the reporting of funding information and to assess the policies regarding the disclosure by authors of any financial and non-financial COI

  • Twenty-one percent of those journals were members of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors (ICMJE), 67% were members of Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE), and 75% were affiliated to a professional organization

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Summary

Introduction

Public health journals need to have clear policies for reporting the funding of studies and authors’ personal financial and non-financial conflicts of interest (COI) disclosures. This study aims to assess the policies of public health journals on reporting of study funding and the disclosure of authors’ COIs. Methods: This is a cross-sectional study of “Public, Environmental & Occupational Health” journals. Teams of two researchers abstracted data in duplicate and independently using REDCap software. Conflicts of interest (COI) are ‘circumstances that create a risk that professional judgments or actions regarding a primary interest will be unduly influenced by a secondary interest’, as defined by the Institute of Medicine [1]

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