English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I am a doctor working for the NHS in England. An article i have written has been accepted for publication and i need to sign the "assignment of copyright" form sent by the publisher. i have signed part of the form. I do not know if the following section of the form applies to me: "If your employer claims copyright in your work, this form must also be signed below by a person authorized to sign for and on behalf of your
employer as confirmation that your employer accepts the terms of this licence.
Signature (on behalf of the employer of the author)"
Do i skip that section ? Who signs it ?

2007-01-04 09:10:14 · 9 answers · asked by Nirmala 4 in Health Other - Health

i am truly amazed at yahoo answers. At 10 o'clock at night ...and so many have helped me with such a specific question. i never thought anyone would be able to help... i am pleasantly surprised.

2007-01-04 09:23:55 · update #1

i am a specialist registrar.
no private work, only NHS.

2007-01-04 09:25:52 · update #2

9 answers

as author the copyright belongs solely to you. as in your position, i myself have written much stuff for the nhs, articles and training manuals etc.

2007-01-04 09:21:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Articles in medical journals are frequently printed by skill of folk who're already experts. It now and returned happens that an undergraduate who has worked with a professor on a study undertaking would be named a co-author (such articles frequently have a number of authors, with the pinnacle of a lab being given the 1st place). sure, you will would desire to come back up with a severe study undertaking, including for a thesis or paper in a medically-correct medical field. yet another threat would psychological protocols to help sufferers who're coping with particular kinds of remedies and ailments, some thing in that line. while you're severe approximately this -- and the probabilities of an undergraduate being printed in a consultant medical magazine are no longer intense -- i'd talk with a professor in a single of your pre-med instructions and attempt to become responsive to a topic count that would desire to have a shot at ebook.

2016-10-30 00:23:26 · answer #2 · answered by ridinger 4 · 0 0

Are you the PI or corresponding author? I don't think that your employer "NHS" needs to sign anything. If you have questions about it, try emailing the editor for the journal.

All and all, I think that you just need to sign the copyright over to the journal and leave it at that.

Which journal anyway?

2007-01-04 09:20:23 · answer #3 · answered by bunja2 3 · 0 0

It depends. Most companies state that anything done during hours you are working for them become the company's property. If that is the case, I'd start with your supervisor and work up the chain of command until you get a signature. If this isn't the case and the paper was written on your own time, then only you have to sign. The publisher is simply covering their butt.

2007-01-04 09:15:24 · answer #4 · answered by lilrubberducky 3 · 0 0

That means if you are being paid by your work to do the research, i.e a professor for a university, you generally have to have a supervisor for the university sign it
If you are working on your own all you need to sign the copyright and skip that section. Congrats

2007-01-04 09:21:40 · answer #5 · answered by Dome 1 · 0 0

The NHS does not claim any copyright over your work. You can skip that section. If you were working for a private research institute, they would claim copyright.

2007-01-04 09:14:47 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you are entitled to the copyright on the article then don't sign since it belongs to you. If anyone else is entitled to the copyright then they need to sign. It sounds like you are the sole owner so skip that bit.

2007-01-04 09:15:20 · answer #7 · answered by Birdman 7 · 0 0

Some health authorities will write it into the conditions of employment that any discoveries or papers published whilst you are in their employ becomes their property. You need to talk to someone in Human Resources at your hospital to find out if your authority do this;

2007-01-04 09:20:55 · answer #8 · answered by huggz 7 · 0 0

1

2017-02-27 21:54:47 · answer #9 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers