key: cord-0818155-jb85pozu authors: Matsui, Kenji; Yamamoto, Keiichiro; Inoue, Yusuke title: Professional Commitment to Ethical Discussions Needed From Epidemiologists in the COVID-19 Pandemic date: 2020-09-05 journal: J Epidemiol DOI: 10.2188/jea.je20200278 sha: e8688d88a1820765f46668e24bc3d9f640cf8804 doc_id: 818155 cord_uid: jb85pozu nan The global threat due to the novel coronavirus 2019 infection (COVID-19) pandemic has given rise to various ethical challenges in public health, and increasingly more articles are being published in medical journals on ethical issues concerning COVID-19. One major theme concerns the moral distress of balancing the importance of epidemiological surveillance and digital patient tracing with privacy concerns. [1] [2] [3] [4] Given the extraordinary current circumstances, other pressing ethical questions have also been posed, including the following: Which studies should be continued or cancelled? What constitutes an ethical study design and rationale? How should the participant burden=risk be balanced against the benefits of research? Should protocol procedures be limited or modified to ensure participant safety, at the risk of decreasing research integrity? Should we justify a shortcut through a fast-track research review and an expedited submission-review process, with the potential downside of lower research quality and more faulty publications? How should the scientific community avoid jeopardizing the pandemic public health management by the rapid and uncontrolled flood of clinical=epidemiological data dissemination in the media? Should we justify conducting urgently required research in developing countries with more treatment-naïve potential research populations, even though the peak of infection expansion in developed countries has already waned? [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] Conventionally, academic journals have been one of the most powerful venues for scholarly discussion. However, since the COVID-19 expansion, the extent to which scholarly journals of epidemiology have served as discussion forums for ethical issues on COVID-19 has become unclear, even though many of the ethical questions noted above would likely be important for epidemiologists as well. Against that backdrop, we conducted a small bibliometric survey on June 11, 2020. Specifically, we performed a database search of PubMed using the constraints of "COVID-19," and "ethics. Of the 39 published in public health=epidemiological journals, only one was published in an epidemiological journal. 18 Accordingly, our findings suggest that unfortunately, epidemiologist engagement in ethical issues on COVID-19 is minimal at best. We speculate that this may be caused by the following factors: (1) Not all-but many-epidemiologists might be indifferent to ethical issues on epidemiology, or have left these arguments in the hands of others such as bioethicists; (2) While they may be concerned with ethical issues, epidemiologists may be less familiar with developing ethical arguments; (3) Appropriate forums for mediation of ethical discussions in epidemiological journals may be few in number. Notably, this third factor should be rejected because nearly all of the top 10 epidemiological journals with "epidmiol-" or the equivalent in their names, being indexed in the 2018 Journal Citation Reports ® (except Journal of Epidemiology, ranked 10 th ), provide sufficient space for unsolicited and unstructured longer articles (1,500-3,000 words) for development of debates or perspectives, in addition to the Letter to the Editor section. Therefore, we suspect that most epidemiologists are simply not using the available forums well. We believe that ethical issues directly concerning epidemiology should be shared and discussed, first and foremost, among epidemiologists. Because epidemiologists are health professionals, they shoulder the responsibility to maintain ethical integrity in their epidemiological endeavors. Utilizing such forums effectively and actively to exchange opinions on the ethics of epidemiology will promote the healthy development of epidemiology as a science and will contribute greatly to public health policymaking as well. 19 revised the paper. KM, KY, and YI agreed and approved the final version of the paper. Conflicts of interest: None declared. Funding: This work was funded by the Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research of the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [Kiban (A) 19H01083, and Kiban (B) 19H03868]. Digital health and the COVID-19 epidemic: and assessment framework for apps from an epidemiological and legal perspective Ethical guidelines for COVID-19 tracing apps Ethics and governance for digital disease surveillance Personal data usage and privacy considerations in the COVID-19 global pandemic COVID-19 ethics and research COVID-19 human challenge studies: ethical issues Ethics of controlled human infection to address COVID-19 Global Consortium Study of Neurological Dysfunction in COVID-19 (GCS-NeuroCOVID): study design and rationale. Neurocrit Care Equitably sharing the benefits and burdens of research: Covid-19 raises the stakes Cancer research ethics and COVID-19 Key ethical questions for research during the COVID-19 pandemic Queries on the COVID-19 quick publishing ethics Ethical and sensible dissemination of information during the COVID-19 pandemic Challenges and strategies to research ethics in conducting COVID-19 research Against pandemic research exceptionalism COVID-19 research in Africa COVID-19 and moral imperialism in multinational clinical research COVID-19 disease emergency operational instructions for Mental Health Departments issued by the Italian Society of Epidemiological Psychiatry Roles and responsibilities of epidemiologists Author contributions: KM wrote the draft of the paper. KY and YI provided analysis of ethical aspects of the given issues, and