糖心Vlog

Force researchers to declare tobacco funding, scholars聽say

Bath academics say journals should standardise conflict of interest policies, but Philip Morris-funded foundation warns against boycott

Published on
May 2, 2021
Last updated
May 2, 2021
Source: istock

Researchers should be forced to list the financial support they receive directly or聽indirectly from tobacco companies on聽their academic profiles to tackle concerns that scholars鈥 links to industry are 鈥渘ot聽always immediately apparent鈥, a聽study recommends.

In a paper in Tobacco Control, researchers from the University of Bath鈥檚 Tobacco Control Group call for a new system of financial disclosure for scientists who accept funding from third-party organisations funded by tobacco companies 鈥 in聽particular, the (FSFW), established by the Swiss-US tobacco giant Philip Morris International in聽2017 with the stated aim of聽鈥渆liminating smoking worldwide鈥 within a聽generation.

But some scientists have questioned the foundation鈥檚 ambition in light of what the paper calls 鈥渢he industry鈥檚 long history of science manipulation鈥, adding that 鈥渋ncreased transparency鈥 was needed because researchers funded by the foundation do聽not always make clear the industry origins of their support.

鈥淪ome researchers at FSFW-funded organisations are failing to be transparent about their industry links, when authoring or peer-reviewing articles, and editing journals or special issues,鈥 claims the study by Tess Legg, Michel Legendre and Anna Gilmore, which says the foundation and grantees had 鈥渞esorted to repeated obfuscation when publishing their science鈥.

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The paper says that two articles authored or co-authored by FSFW grantees, which appeared last year in the Emerald-published journal Drug and Alcohol Today, failed to mention the millions of dollars received by their institutions from the foundation.

Only one of nine papers, all of which included authors funded by the foundation, explicitly identified Philip Morris as the ultimate source of funding, it聽adds, claiming that the foundation was 鈥渟eemingly looking to publish in journals with less stringent or less stringently enforced [conflict of interest] policies鈥.

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To combat such practices, journals should standardise their practices on how conflicts of interest should be disclosed to ensure that all FSFW funding received by a researcher or their research group is declared, Ms Legg told 糖心Vlog.

鈥淭here are almost as many different guidelines as there are journals, so there is no consistency about how people disclose conflicts of interest, and that needs tackling across publishing,鈥 said Ms Legg, who聽noted聽that some journals did not require editors or reviewers to disclose their links to industry-funded bodies.

Other measures beyond publishing were also needed, added Ms Legg, whose paper backed a recent proposal for researchers to list their external funding sources on their ORCID academic profile.

鈥淓very researcher would need to input all their financial links 鈥 whether that is funding for going to conferences or grants their research group has received from the tobacco industry,鈥 she explained, saying this would help journal editors to identify and exclude research funded by the tobacco industry and its affiliates, a practice to which many titles already adhere.

Professor Gilmore, professor of public health at Bath, told THE that their investigations had shown that the tobacco industry was 鈥渙nce again using science as a political weapon鈥.

鈥淭he industry is using the foundation and its published studies for PR purposes while the science they do not want you to see almost certainly remains hidden, just like in the past,鈥 said Professor Gilmore.

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Calling for a 鈥渘ew funding model鈥 for the Philip Morris-funded foundation, she added that 鈥渢he tobacco industry should pay for research, but it cannot be trusted to operationalise聽that鈥.

鈥淚nstead, science in this area should be funded through legally mandated payments from the tobacco industry which are then independently administered,鈥 said Professor Gilmore.

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However, some researchers named in the Tobacco Control聽article took issue with study, saying its call for journals to reject all research that received industry-related funding was misguided.

Axel Klein, editor-in-chief of Drug and Alcohol Today and senior research fellow at the Global Drug Policy Observatory at Swansea University, told THE that the paper鈥檚 鈥渁ttempt to bully the journal into refusing to accept such papers is tantamount to censorship and completely ignores the fact that the foundation is recognised as an independent non-profit under US聽law鈥.

In a statement, the foundation said it 鈥渟upports transparency in research鈥 and 鈥渁dhere[d] to the highest ethical and scientific standards, including disclosing our funding source in all journal submissions by our staff and grantees鈥.

鈥淭he foundation requires that its grantees make their research publicly available, including their raw data for re-analysis,鈥 it聽said.

It also criticised the 鈥渟hort-sighted policies of some publications鈥that meant] research funded by our grantees and scientists from the tobacco and e-cigarette industries are rejected without review鈥, which was 鈥渃ounter to basic principles of academic freedom and Unesco鈥檚 open science recommendations鈥.

This 鈥渂oycotting鈥 of research into harm reduction technologies 鈥渦ndermines the ability of policymakers to make truly, fully informed decisions鈥, it said.

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鈥淥ur mission is to end smoking in this generation. All of our actions are to that end. To suggest otherwise is not just wrong but the antithesis to what we should all be seeking, which is to accelerate the decline in tobacco-related deaths,鈥 the foundation said.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

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