Informa Markets US Editorial Policies
We provide fair, balanced and insightful content to our audiences. We want to be as transparent as possible about what we do and welcome your reactions, questions or comments on any given project, piece of editorial, or policy:
Here are some of the basic policies we follow.
Advertising and Sponsored Resources
We believe that the future of medical practice and the integrity of our brands rely on full transparency regarding how and whether commerce has influenced editorial.
Ads: Informa Markets US products usually include advertisements. This is our core business model. With advertisements we couldn’t offer our content to you without asking you to pay for it.
However, our authors, editors and writers serve the audience first, foremost and fully.
Sponsored resources: Sometimes, companies pay us to create educational content that supports their goals.
Our editors strive to make content within a sponsored resource relevant and accurate, but sponsored resources may be produced outside our journals' standard editorial processes. The sponsor typically decides what topics are covered and reviews and approves the final product. Note, however, that all sponsored content undergoes editorial or independent peer review to ensure the accuracy of the content.
Examples of sponsored resources include custom editorial, clinical roundtables and supplements.
Journalistic Ethics
Informa Markets has an internal policy on journalistic ethics.
Here are some key points from that document:
- Informa Markets is an ethical company and strives to maintain the highest-possible ethical standards in its journalism – just as it does in all business activities.
- Informa Markets subscribes to the view expressed by the US Society of Professional Journalists, which states in its own Code of Ethics: “Public enlightenment is the forerunner of justice and the foundation of democracy. The duty of the journalist is to further those ends by seeking truth and providing a fair and comprehensive account of events and issues. Conscientious journalists from all media and specialties strive to serve the public with thoroughness and honesty. Professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist’s credibility.”
- Informa Markets' journalists treat all members of their professional communities fairly and openly. Whatever platform we use – print, online, mobile, social media, video – we strive to deliver the complete truth as best we understand it at the time of writing.
- Informa Markets' journalists treat everyone they interview in a professional manner. They do not pay for interviews or confidential material – thus encouraging the recipient to falsify or sensationalize information. They do not promise favorable coverage to those who agree to be interviewed, or threaten to besmirch the reputation of those who refuse to talk. They only make inquiries into someone’s personal life if it has a direct bearing on a story of professional interest.
- Under no circumstances should journalists bribe public officials or private professionals for information. This is illegal in most jurisdictions.
- Nor must journalists plagiarize the material of others – whether words or images. This represents a breach of copyright in many jurisdictions and would represent a fundamental breach of trust and integrity.
- With the agreement of the editor or brand director, interviewees are shown sight of copy for approval/feedback. However, our starting point is that we employ professional journalists who have the trust of their sources. If interviewees are concerned that the facts of a story might be misconstrued, these can be checked in advance of publication. That said, there may be instances where copy approval is essential – for example, in co-branded publications. In these situations, approval should be formally given by the editor or brand director.
- Like all Informa Markets employees, journalists must obey the law at all times.
- Journalists should not record interviews or private conversations without the consent of all parties involved. The only exceptions to this rule are where there is a genuine public interest in the story, and where approval for secret video or audio recordings has been given by editors or brand directors, and in consultation with Informa Markets' legal department and/or externally-approved lawyers.
- Whenever possible, Informal Markets journalists pay their own way – including travel, accommodation, and sustenance. This is the best way to preserve our neutrality. Where it is unavoidable to accept a source’s hospitality (on an organized press trip, for example), it should be made clear at the outset that the covering of any expenses will not influence our coverage.
- We compete ferociously with our rivals, but we are open and fair. If journalists use material published by competitors, they attribute it.
User-Generated Content/Comments
Informa Markets staff aren’t the only ones who put content on our sites, of course; we invite the community we serve to contribute. In fact, user comments, forums, and the like are a key part of keeping content balanced. If we get something wrong, you can go ahead and correct it or provide another point of view.
When users comment on the site, they have to adhere to our terms of service. This document doesn’t replace those terms, but it is a good spot to elaborate and call out a few main points and expectations.
- Comments cannot libel someone and shouldn’t be a place for personal attacks. These sites are about solutions and discussions.
- Our sites are for physicians and their professional community. It is not an appropriate place for patients to ask for healthcare advice. On most of our sites, only physicians and other professional providers can comment.
- Comments are also not a place to run thinly disguised ads. If a site allows non-physicians, such as vendor representatives to comment, we are looking for comments that contribute to the conversation, not pitches.
- Nobody should violate patient privacy by revealing personal health information in any kind of contributed content. Please be circumspect about revealing any personal health information in any kind of contributed content that might make it possible for a patient to be identified, such as faces.
- In some instances, we might pay users to contribute to our sites.
In short, in a confusing media world, we are doing our very best to hew to high standards and full transparency about what we do.
Think we’re not? We want to hear about it.