Conflict of Interest
Conflicts of interest may exist when professional judgements concerning a primary interest has the possibility of being influenced by a secondary interest (e.g.: financial gains). It is to be noted that even perceptions of conflicts of interest are as important as the actual conflicts of interest.
Any agreements with study sponsors (for profit or non-profit), which interfere with the authors’ access to the study data, ability to analyse or interpret the data and publish manuscripts independently according to their own decision, should be avoided by authors at all costs.
A declaration of interests for all authors must be received before an article can be reviewed and accepted for publication.
For authors:
While submitting, authors must list all competing interests relevant to this work, including but not limited to:
- Funding sources
- The role of sponsors in the work design, data collection, and results of the analysis.
- Whether the author is serving on the editorial board of this journal submitting to.
For editors and reviewers:
Editors and reviewers must declare any possible conflict of interests in connection with the manuscript, and if necessary, they must avoid the peer review process. When Editorial Board Members publish articles in the served journal, the editorial office will actively emphasize it so that the authors know that they recuse the potential peer review process.
Common reasons for editors and reviewers to be replaced include but are not limited to:
- The editor or reviewer works at the same organization as one of the authors.
- The editor or reviewer is one of the authors of this work.
- The editor or reviewer is on the avoidance list from the author(s).
- The editor or reviewer has a financial relationship or personal relationship with an author.