This is a MedPage Today story.
Studies censored by government employees will have a tough time getting published in the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH), the journal’s leadership said during an interview with MedPage Today’s editor in chief.
“We at the American Journal of Public Health have no interest in following the president’s prohibitions on language,” said Georges Benjamin, MD, publisher of AJPH and executive director of its parent organization, the American Public Health Association.
“We will publish things under our guidelines, under our ethical principles,” Benjamin told Jeremy Faust, MD, acknowledging that may mean that federal government employees — and perhaps even private-sector researchers with federal grants — won’t submit to them.
Benjamin made the statements to Faust during a Tuesday Instagram Live (at about 28 minutes into the video) hosted by MedPage Today titled, “Public Health Under Attack,” focusing on the impact of a recent spate of executive… Health ABC News: Health
This is a MedPage Today story.
Studies censored by government employees will have a tough time getting published in the American Journal of Public Health (AJPH), the journal’s leadership said during an interview with MedPage Today’s editor in chief.
“We at the American Journal of Public Health have no interest in following the president’s prohibitions on language,” said Georges Benjamin, MD, publisher of AJPH and executive director of its parent organization, the American Public Health Association.
“We will publish things under our guidelines, under our ethical principles,” Benjamin told Jeremy Faust, MD, acknowledging that may mean that federal government employees — and perhaps even private-sector researchers with federal grants — won’t submit to them.
Benjamin made the statements to Faust during a Tuesday Instagram Live (at about 28 minutes into the video) hosted by MedPage Today titled, “Public Health Under Attack,” focusing on the impact of a recent spate of executive…