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Another editorial endorsement of NIH mandate
Editorial from the Honolulu Advertiser, Hawaii' s largest newspaper:
http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070810/
OPINION01/708100321/1105/OPINION01
Friday, August 10, 2007
Public deserves access to NIH research work
When it comes to how our tax dollars are spent, it's not too
often these days that taxpayers can feel they're getting their
money's worth.
So it's encouraging to see a measure in Congress designed to do
just that.
Taxpayers pay about $28 billion annually to finance valuable
research at the National Institutes of Health, resulting in more
than 60,000 published studies yearly.
The problem is most of us never see those reports. The studies
typically wind up in published journals that, in turn, sell the
information to subscribers, commanding high subscription rates.
Doctors, patients and the public need to pony up for the data.
And while NIH has a "voluntary initiative" calling for the
taxpayer- funded research to be aggregated on a free Web site
(PubMed Central), less than 5 percent of researchers comply.
That could soon change.
The House cleared a bill that would require NIH to provide free
online access to its research articles within a year of
publication in a peer-review journal. It's now up to the Senate
to follow suit.
Publishers of the journals argue that mandatory public access
holds potential copyright problems. And, of course, they worry
that free access would discourage others from paying pricey
subscription fees, affecting their bottom line.
The peer review system has value. But that doesn't mean
publishers should continue to cash in endlessly. The bill allows
publishers to continue the review process and sell journals for
the first 12 months - catering to those who need the information
quickly.
Beyond that, providing greater access will not only allow
taxpayers to see the fruits of their financing, it also expands
the chances of significant medical breakthroughs by allowing
researchers to continue to build on valuable research. And that
truly would maximize the return on our hard-earned tax dollars.
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