PLoS ONE (Dec 2007)

Reporting science and conflicts of interest in the lay press.

  • Daniel M Cook,
  • Elizabeth A Boyd,
  • Claudia Grossmann,
  • Lisa A Bero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0001266
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 12
p. e1266

Abstract

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BackgroundForthright reporting of financial ties and conflicts of interest of researchers is associated with public trust in and esteem for the scientific enterprise.Methods/principal findingsWe searched Lexis/Nexis Academic News for the top news stories in science published in 2004 and 2005. We conducted a content analysis of 1152 newspaper stories. Funders of the research were identified in 38% of stories, financial ties of the researchers were reported in 11% of stories, and 5% reported financial ties of sources quoted. Of 73 stories not reporting on financial ties, 27% had financial ties publicly disclosed in scholarly journals.Conclusions/significanceBecause science journalists often did not report conflict of interest information, adherence to gold-standard recommendations for science journalism was low. Journalists work under many different constraints, but nonetheless news reports of scientific research were incomplete, potentially eroding public trust in science.