ethics 2006 practical information for northern plains area employees

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Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

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Page 1: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Ethics 2006Practical Information for

Northern Plains Area Employees

Page 2: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

NPA Guiding Principle:

DO THE RIGHT THINGIN THE RIGHT WAY!!!!

Page 3: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Principles of Ethical Conduct

Public Service is a public trustEmployees shall put forth honest effort in performance of their dutiesEmployees shall not use public office for private gainEmployees shall protect and conserve Federal property

Employees shall act impartiallyEmployees shall not hold financial interests that conflict with performance of their dutyEmployees shall not engage in outside employment/activities that conflict with their dutiesEmployees shall adhere to all laws and regulations that provide equal opportunity

Page 4: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Employees shall endeavor to avoid any actions creating the

appearance that they are violating the law or the Principles of Ethical

Conduct

Page 5: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Practical Guidance

GiftsOutside EmploymentTravelScience EthicsAuthorshipPeer Review

Page 6: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

GiftsGenerally an employee may not accept gifts that are given because of their positions or that come from certain prohibited sources (person/organization that conducts business with the agency, conducts activities regulated by the agency, or has interests that can be affected by the employee).An employee can accept a gift valued at $20 or less from an entity ARS does business with, provided the total value of gifts from the same person/organization is not more than $50 in a calendar year.Gifts can be provided to supervisors if they are valued at no more than $10.

Page 7: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Outside Employment/Activities

You may engage in outside employment/activities that requires the use of inherent expertise provided your work does not create a real or apparent conflict of interest by interfering with your official duties.

Page 8: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Things to Remember

Employees who file a public or confidential financial disclosure report must seek and obtain approval to engage in outside employment/activities.You need to submit an REE-101 if the above pertains to you.Even if you are not required to seek approval you need to refrain from conflict of interest activities.

Page 9: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Travel

ARS Policy - travel will be performed only when necessary to carry out authorized activities.

Page 10: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

NPA Travel

Technical support (including Cat 3s) & admin. staff travel generally limited to training and/or site visits to accomplish assigned tasks.Tech. support & admin. staff travel for other purposes is reviewed and approved when circumstances justify need. No guarantees!!!

Page 11: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

NPA Travel – cont.Foreign travel requests need to be initiated a minimum of 60 days prior to departure and must be approved by the Area Director.You should not request excessive amounts of AL (more than 3 to 5 days) in conjunction with official travel. P&P 344.2Contributed travel requests should pose no conflicts of interest and are approved by the DAEA and Area Director.

Page 12: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Code of Scientific Ethics

I dedicate myself to the pursuit and promotion of beneficial scientific investigation, consistent with the mission of ARS.I will never hinder the beneficial research of others.I will conduct, discuss, manage, judge and report science honestly, thoroughly, and without conflict of interest.I will encourage constructive critique of my personal science and that of my colleagues, in a manner that fosters harmony and quality amid scientific debate.

Page 13: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Code of Scientific Ethics – cont.

I recognize past and present contributors to my science and will not accept unwarranted credit for the accomplishments of others.I will maintain and improve my professional skills and be a mentor to others.I will ensure safety and humane treatment of human and animal subjects and will prevent abuse of research resources entrusted to me.

Page 14: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Guidelines on Authorship

The question of who should be an author is

fundamentally an issue of scientific ethics.

Page 15: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Each author must have participated sufficiently

in the work to take public responsibility for

the content of the article.

Page 16: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

An author should be involved in:

Conception or design, or analysis and interpretation of data, or both; and,Drafting the article or revising it for critically important intellectual content; and, Final approval of the version to be published.

Page 17: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

All elements of an article critical to the main

conclusions must be attributable to at least one author. The order of names on a multi-authored article

will be decided by the group responsible for the research.

Page 18: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Participation solely in the collection or

summarization of data does not justify

authorship.

Page 19: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

All individuals to be listed as authors, regardless of the

classification of their positions, or other affiliation,

must meet the previous authorship guidelines.

Page 20: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Manuscript Peer Review

Peer review generally only used since the middle of the 20th century.In earlier times the decision to allow publication was generally made by editors.Did you know that Watson and Crick’s 1951 paper on the structure of DNA in “Nature” was not sent out for peer review??

Page 21: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Peer Review Definitions

Scrutiny by ones peers.Review of an article to decide if it is authoritative enough to be published.Reviewed and approved by other experts in the authors field.A critical review by peers who are independent of the work being reviewed.

Page 22: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

ARS Peer Review

ARS defines peer review as the evaluation of the conceptual, relevance, and technical soundness of research by highly qualified scientists active in the same or closely related research fields.

Page 23: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Criticisms of Peer Review

It’s slow!May suppress new ideas that contradict with reviewers own views. Conflict of interest!!Does not eliminate mediocre or inferior pieces of work. Little “scientific” scrutiny of what journals publish.

Page 24: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Recent Peer Review IssuesJan. 2005 – J. Amer. Med. Assoc – published a correction on overestimate of the number of deaths attributed to obesity due to errors in computations.Feb. 2006 – Lancet – retracted a paper reporting non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs reduced risk of oral cancer due to fabricated data.Mar. 2006 – New England J. of Medicine published statement of concern about a paper on Vioxx. Accused researcher of excising data to play down heart risks.

Page 25: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Research Misbehavior or Fraud??

Page 26: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Dr. Hwang Woo SukSouth Korean biomedical scientist at Seoul National University (he recently resigned).Published two papers in Science claiming to have created human stem cells via cloning.Both papers were retracted (including a June 2005 paper with Gerald Schatten and 23 other co-authors) after being found to contain a large amount of fabricated data.He has admitted to fabrication but maintains he was deceived by collaborators.He faces possible criminal charges??

Page 27: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Dr. Gerald Schatten Collaborated with Dr. Suk on the cloning experiments (Science Jan. 20, 2006). He has since halted the collaboration.Cleared of misconduct by the Univ. of Pittsburgh but reprimanded for taking credit for research in which he was hardly involved. Accused of “research misbehavior” since he shirked his responsibility in determining the veracity of data (peer review by a co-author).He signed a letter stating that he had read and approved of the manuscript.It was indicated his role was limited to the review and analysis of anonymized data and assistance in preparation of the manuscript.

Page 28: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

What do you think?

Was Dr. Schatten a victim or directly involved?Should he have spotted “fraud” in his colleague’s work and reported it prior to publication?Is trust an issue?Should he have signed the letter stating approval of the manuscript?Did peer review let him down??

Page 29: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

Peer Review – What Can You Do to Improve the System!

Use it appropriately whether you are an author or reviewer/referee. Be fair and open minded.Seek the most rigorous reviews you can obtain as you develop research plans and report results.Don’t be afraid to speak out when you believe something is “not right” . You are obliged to follow the ARS Code of Scientific Ethics.

Page 30: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

You are encouraged to seek the advice of

ARS/NPA ethics officials whenever you have

questions or concerns.

Page 31: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

REE Ethics Webpage

Page 32: Ethics 2006 Practical Information for Northern Plains Area Employees

NPA Ethics Contacts

Larry Chandler – Designated Area Ethics Advisor; 970-492-7058; [email protected]

Louise Dalton – 970-492-7058; [email protected]