1 / 16

Scientific Misconduct

Scientific Misconduct. Scientific Misconduct Definition. "Misconduct in Research" means fabrication, falsification, plagiarism, or other practices that seriously deviate from those that are commonly accepted within the scientific community for proposing, conducting, or reporting research .

osanna
Download Presentation

Scientific Misconduct

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scientific Misconduct

  2. Scientific Misconduct Definition "Misconduct in Research" means fabrication, falsification, plagiarism, or other practices that seriously deviate from those that are commonly accepted within the scientific community for proposing, conducting, or reporting research. It does not include honest error or honest differences in interpretations or judgments of data. (Source: U.S. Public Health Service Regulations).

  3. Scientific Misconduct Definition Fabrication – making it up Falsification – changing the true description Plagiarism – taking the words and ideas of otherswithout citation Other practicesthat seriously deviate from those that are commonly accepted within the scientific community

  4. proposing, conducting, or reporting research. • Grants • Preliminary data (what is this) • Lab notebooks, other research records • What was done, how, when, results, conclusions • Papers, posters, abstracts, talks, lab meetings

  5. The Cost of Scientific Misconduct • Damage to others • the integrity of scientific knowledge • non-productive lines of enquiry based on false information • the reputation of colleagues co-authors, collaborators, and institutions • waste of financial resources to investigate/repeat • Loss of confidence in the public • Damage to self • Loss of reputation • Loss of funding • Loss of career • Loss of job

  6. Resources about scientific misconduct • Baylor Committee on Scientific Integrity • – Dr. David Nelson, Chair • National AAMC - Beyond the Frameworkhttp://www.aamc.org/research/miscon/contents.htm • Government Office of Research Integrity (ORI)http://ori.dhhs.gov/

  7. Scientific Misconduct Investigations are rare

  8. Fabrication and Falsification are the most common charges

  9. Inquiry Committee on Scientific Integrity Investigation Process for Scientific MisconductInvestigations Findings&Sanctions Allegations Departmental Appeals Board President HSSOffice of Research Integrity IndependentReview Appeal

  10. Most Inquiries do not lead to investigations

  11. There are few findings of scientific misconduct each year

  12. A Recent example of a scientific misconduct investigation at Baylor • Seven Committee members, administrative assistant, secretarial support, legal assistance • Five grant applications and five published papers • Nine separate “issues” grouped by scientific relationships • Found scientific misconduct in seven, no misconduct in two • 48 separate instances of FFP • Report of 540 pages + separate book of figures • Institutional Appeal • ORI Appeal • DAB Hearing • Civil Lawsuit • Seven YEARS

  13. Whistleblowers (1) whistleblowers are free to disclose lawfully whatever information supports a reasonable belief of research misconduct as it is defined by PHS policy,(2) institutions have a duty not to tolerate or engage in retaliation against good-faith whistleblowers,(3) institutions have a duty to provide fair and objective procedures for examining and resolving complaints, disputes and allegations of research misconduct,(4) institutions have a duty to follow procedures that are not tainted by partiality arising from personal or institutional conflict of interest or other sources of bias,(5) institutions have a duty to elicit and evaluate fully and objectively information about concerns raised by whistleblower,(6) institutions have a duty to handle cases involving alleged research misconduct as expeditiously as possible without compromising responsible resolutions, and(7) at the conclusion of proceedings, institutions have a responsibility to credit promptly, in public or private as appropriate, those whose allegations are substantiated

  14. Laboratory safety refresher On-line training: http://bcmnetlearn.corp.bcm.tmc.edu Anesthetic Gas SafetyBloodborne PathogensBiohazard/Medical WasteEmergency ManagementFacilities Fire SafetyIrradiator Security Laser Safety Lab SafetyShipping Biological Samples Hazardous Materials Transportation UV ProtectionX-ray Protection

More Related