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  • Global scientific community commits to sharing data on Zika

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    Global scientific community commits to sharing data on Zika

    Leading global health bodies including academic journals, NGOs, research funders and institutes, have committed to sharing data and results relevant to the current Zika crisis and future public health emergencies as rapidly and openly as possible.

    Organisations including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, M?decins Sans Fronti?res, the US National Institute of Health and the Wellcome Trust, along with leading academic journals including Nature, Science and the New England Journal of Medicine, have signed a joint declaration and hope that other bodies will come on board in the coming weeks.

    The statement is intended to ensure that any information that might have value in combatting the Zika outbreak is made available to the international community, free of charge, as soon as is feasibly possible. Journal signatories provide assurance that doing so will not preclude researchers from subsequently publishing papers in their titles.

    It follows a consensus statement arising from a WHO consultation in September 2015, in which leading international stakeholders from multiple sectors affirmed that timely and transparent pre-publication sharing of data and results during public health emergencies must become the global norm.

    Dr Jeremy Farrar, Director of the Wellcome Trust and a signatory of the statement, said: ?Research is an essential part of the response to any global health emergency. This is particularly true for Zika, where so much is still unknown about the virus, how it is spread and the possible link with microcephaly.

    It?s critical that as results become available they are shared rapidly in a way that is equitable, ethical and transparent. This will ensure that the knowledge gained is turned quickly into health interventions that can have an impact on the epidemic.

    It?s extremely heartening to see so many leading international organisations united in this unprecedented commitment to open science, reinforcing the decision by the WHO to declare Zika a Public Health Emergency of International Concern.?

    Statement on Data Sharing in Public Health Emergencies:

    The arguments for sharing data, and the consequences of not doing so, have been thrown into stark relief by the Ebola and Zika outbreaks.

    In the context of a public health emergency of international concern, there is an imperative on all parties to make any information available that might have value in combatting the crisis.

    We are committed to working in partnership to ensure that the global response to public health emergencies is informed by the best available research evidence and data, as such:

    Journal signatories will make all content concerning the Zika virus free to access. Any data or preprint deposited for unrestricted dissemination ahead of submission of any paper will not pre-empt its publication in these journals.

    Funder signatories will require researchers undertaking work relevant to public health emergencies to set in place mechanisms to share quality-assured interim and final data as rapidly and widely as possible, including with public health and research communities and the World Health Organisation.

    We urge other organisations to make the same commitments.

    This commitment is in line with the consensus statement agreed at a WHO expert consultation on data sharing last year whereby researchers are expected to share data at the earliest opportunity, once they are adequately controlled for release and subject to any safeguards required to protect research participants and patients.

    Signatories to the Statement
    Academy of Medical Sciences, UK
    Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
    Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
    The British Medical Journal (BMJ)
    Bulletin of the World Health Organization
    Canadian Institutes of Health Research
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
    Chinese Academy of Sciences
    Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention
    The Department of Biotechnology, Government of India
    The Department for International Development (DFID)
    Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
    eLife
    The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
    F1000
    Fondation M?rieux
    Funda??o Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz)
    The Institut Pasteur
    Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
    The JAMA Network
    The Lancet
    M?decins Sans Fronti?res/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
    National Academy of Medicine
    National Institutes of Health, USA
    National Science Foundation, USA
    The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM)
    PLOS
    Science Journals
    South African Medical Research Council
    Springer Nature
    UK Medical Research Council
    Wellcome Trust
    ZonMw - The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development


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    http://novel-infectious-diseases.blogspot.com/

  • #2
    http://www.who.int/bulletin/online_first/zika_open/en/

    WHO: Zika Open


    These papers are posted in the context of the Public Health Emergency of International Concern declared by the Director-General of the World Health Organization 1 February 2016.

    The data in these papers are freely available for unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided that the original work is properly cited as indicated by the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Intergovernmental Organizations license (CC BY IGO 3.0).

    If you wish to submit a manuscript, please do so via our online tracking system.
    EDITORIAL

    Data sharing in public health emergencies: a call to researchers
    - Christopher Dye, Kidist Bartolomeos, Vasee Moorthy, Marie Paule Kieny
    Posted: 4 February 2016


    RESEARCH IN EMERGENCIES

    Microcephaly in Northeast Brazil: a review of 16,208 births between 2012 and 2015
    - Juliana Sousa Soares de Ara?jo, Cl?udio Teixeira Regis, Renata Grig?rio Silva Gomes, Thiago Ribeiro Tavares, C?cera Rocha dos Santos, Patr?cia Melo Assun??o, Renata Val?ria N?brega, Diana de F?tima Alves Pinto, Bruno Vin?cius Dantas Bezerra, & Sandra da Silva Mattos
    Posted: 4 February 2016

    Microcephaly: normality parameters and its determinants in northeastern Brazil: a multicentre prospective cohort study
    - Hermano Alexandre Lima Rocha, Luciano Lima Correia, ?lvaro Jorge Madeiro Leite, Jocileide Sales Campos, Anamaria Cavalcante e Silva, M?rcia Maria Tavares Machado, Sabrina Gabriele Maia Oliveira Rocha, N?dia Maria Gir?o Saraiva de Almeida, and Antonio Jos? Ledo Alves da Cunha
    Posted: 8 February 2016

    Establishing Base Levels of Microcephaly in Brazil Prior to the Arrival of Zika Viral Illnesses
    - Charles H. Simmins, Jr.
    Posted: 8 February 2016

    Estimating a feasible serial interval range for Zika fever
    - Maimuna S Majumder, Emily Cohn, Durland Fish & John S Brownstein
    Posted: 9 February 2016

    Zika: the origin and spread of a mosquito-borne virus
    - Mary Kay Kindhauser, Tomas Allen, Veronika Frank, Ravi Shankar Santhana, Christopher Dye
    Posted: 9 February 2016

    State of knowledge on Zika virus for an adequate laboratory response
    - R?mi N Charrel, Isabelle Leparc-Goffart, Suzan Pas, Xavier de Lamballerie, Marion Koopmans & Chantal Reusken
    Posted: 10 February 2016


    http://novel-infectious-diseases.blogspot.com/

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