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The 2001 annual review by the Office of Research Integrity, reported the HIGHEST number of MISCONDUCT cases since 1977. Among the 78 reporting institutions: 61 opened 72 new cases to look into 127 allegations including: 46 cases of falsification, 37 of fabrication, 17 of plagiarism, and 27 others.
Research integrity and ethical principles seem to have been swept aside in an Enronesque environment. Human values have ceded to utilitarian business ethics and its short-term goal of maximizing profits. Business ethics and unethical research practiceswhich have largely dispensed with the niceties of informed consenthave become the norm and practice in biomedical research at teaching hospitals. Public disclosure about corrupt practices has eroded public trust. Professional academic associations are scrambling to come up with ethical guidelines on paperbut not legally enforceable rules.
The British Medical Journal reports that new guidelines will be issued promoting research integrity:
Research integrity is vital to maintaining public trust and to the scientific enterprise itself, says the report, but as yet there are no established measures for assessing it. Funding agencies need to remedy this by funding relevant research programmes, it recommends.
The Alliance for Human Research Protection believes it will take more than guidelines or Institutional self assessment and accreditation to bring medical research practice back to a level of excellence and integrityit will take random inspection by unaffiliated independent auditors, and evenhanded enforcement.

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Strong institutional leadership, ongoing self assessment, and comprehensive training in ethics are critical to fostering a national climate in which scientific research integrity can flourish, concludes a US report. The report, by the Committee on Assessing Integrity in Research Environments, was prompted by the US Office of Research Integrity (ORI), which monitors and regulates research misconduct.
The annual ORI review for 2001 reported the highest number of misconduct cases since 1977. Among the 78 reporting institutions, 61 opened 72 new cases to look into 127 allegations, which included 46 cases of falsification, 37 of fabrication, 17 of plagiarism, and 27 others.
Last year the ORI commissioned the US Institute of Medicine and the National Research Councils Division on Earth and Life Studies, which jointly formed the committee, to come up with the core elements needed for promoting responsible conduct in scientific research.
The committee took oral and written evidence from a range of invited experts and reviewed publications from the research community and government, as well as media coverage of the issue. It also assessed data on organisational behaviour and learning cultures.
The recommendations have been posted on the internet in advance of its print publication in September.
Research integrity is vital to maintaining public trust and to the scientific enterprise itself, says the report, but as yet there are no established measures for assessing it. Funding agencies need to remedy this by funding relevant research programmes, it recommends.
Regulations designed to encourage research integrity can be effective but increase bureaucracy and can lead to complacency, says the report. Institutional adherence to policies and procedures, while welcome, is insufficient; a more proactive and committed approach needs to be adopted from the inside.
Institutions need to offer strong supportive leadership, denoted by exemplary behaviour and absolute clarity on expected conduct, says the report. Individuals should be able to seek assistance without fear of retribution.
To be effective, institutions need to provide educational programmes on science ethics, delivered by people actively involved in the relevant line of research, recommends the report.
Institutions also need to continually evaluate their efforts to foster research integrity, to improve quality, and to promote organisational learning. Institutional self assessment should become part of existing accreditation, the report recommends, and to this end the Office of Research Integrity should establish a public database of those actively involved invalidating measures of responsible research conduct.
The report, Integrity in Scientific Research: Creating an Environment that Promotes Responsible Conduct, can be accessed from the National Academy website: http://bob.nap.edu
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