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Hi All,

I'm forwarding this email from Richard Smith in response to an email from
Swarna Bandara. It relates to the withdrawal of free access to journals in
Bangladesh through the HINARI initiative.  It appears that HINARI is being
undermined.
A depressing move.

jon

-- 
Jon Brassey
TRIP Database
http://www.tripdatabase.com
TILT
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Richard Smith <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Thu, Jan 13, 2011 at 6:58 AM
Subject: [HIFA2015] HINARI: Publishers withdraw 2500 journals from free
access scheme in Bangladesh (8)
To: HIFA2015 - Healthcare Information For All by 2015 <[log in to unmask]>


Dear Swarna,

Your response is extremely helpful.

I was responsible for alerting Neil and the BMJ when I heard from a friend
about the major publishers stopping access to their journals in Bangladesh
through HINARI. We thought that this might have happened in other countries,
and clearly it has. There hasn't been the publicity there should have been,
and I can see that WHO doesn't want to upset the publishers by publicising
the losses. But it would be very good to know how many countries have had
access stopped. HINARI may be slowly dying, unnoticed by the world.

I was involved in starting HINARI when I was editor of the BMJ. We paid for
one of our staff to work with WHO and help make it happen. We had the launch
of the project in BMA House in London.

One of the main incentives for the commercial publishers was, I judge,
watching the pharmaceutical industry take a beating over its behaviour in
low and middle income countries. They may have forgotten that now and hope
that they can make increases in their profits from stopping access in some
countries.

I think that they are shooting themselves in the foot, particularly when
open access is gaining momentum.

We should find out exactly how many countries have been shut out and mount a
campaign to embarrass the companies into reinstating access in low income
countries.

I suggest as well that people send rapid responses to the news item in the
BMJ. Sadly and ironically it's not open access, but the link is:

http://www.bmj.com/content/342/bmj.d196.full

Richard Smith

HIFA2015 profile: Richard Smith is an Executive Director of UnitedHealth
Group, where he is responsible for a programme to create centres in the
developing world to counter chronic disease (cardiovascular disease,
diabetes, and chronic respiratory disease). UnitedHealth Group is a
diversified health and well-being company dedicated to making the health
care system work better. Richard is a board member of the Public Library of
Science, and was formerly Editor of the BMJ and Chief Executive of the BMJ
Publishing Group. richardswsmith AT yahoo.co.uk

-----

From: "Swarna Bandara" swarna.bandara AT uwimona.edu.jm
To: "HIFA2015 - Healthcare Information For All by 2015" [log in to unmask]
Subject: [HIFA2015] HINARI: Publishers withdraw 2500 journals from free
access scheme in Bangladesh (7)
Date: 12 Jan 2011 15:54:43 +0100

Dear Colleagues,

Publishers withholding access to journals in HINARI is not new, but
publicized very little about it. We in Jamaica had the subscription at a low
price and most of the major publishers blocked access to their journals
(Elsevier, Blackwell, etc.) The reason given was that publishers fear that
we may cancel the few journals we subscribe to. I know that it is not only
Jamaica facing the problem. The paper published by my colleague in Peru
'Biomedical Journals and Global Poverty: Is HINARI a Step Backwards?'
published in PloS Medicine gives a very good idea about how much access is
available to those countries that were penalized by publishers. Here is the
link to the paper;
http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pmed.0040220

I always maintained that this is an excellent initiative and WHO must be
given the credit and that is why we support it. However, publishers have not
seen the benefits of the initiative to less developed world. I have
protested this issue at every opportunity I got at various international
conferences on public forums, but there was no change. Even with these
restrictions, statistics from WHO reflects very high usage of HINARI by
Jamaican scientists. This is very much due the type of training we provided.
One can imagine how useful HINARI would be if no restrictions are imposed.
After publishers restrictions, the most journals journals we can access
through HINARI can be freely accessed by other sources as well.

As far as I know, access is not blocked to African countries where Internet
access is lowest. World Statistics on World Internet Usage show up to June
2010 Internet penetration by African continent is only 10.9% of total world
Internet access. (http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm) This is an
increase from 4% over the last 2-3 years. Out of this, 90% of Internet
access is from South Africa. I am not certain whether SA qualified for
HINARI [*]. In effect, the publishers are giving the access to people who
cannot get the full use of HINARI and boast about it as if the access is
provided to all countries qualified for accessing HINARI.

These actions of publishers provide a clear idea to the scientists how
publishers control scholarly communication. They decide what is to be
published and who can access it. When the catering is for the rich they have
no reason to accept papers reporting problems of poor countries, and when
they do even the institution the author belongs to cannot access it.
Publishing research is market driven industry, and not for the original
purpose of communicating research. Recently Elsevier had reduced the freedom
given to authors previously to archive preprints of papers published in
their journals in institutional repositories.

This is why it is so important we in the less developed world recognize Open
Access as the way of research communication. This discussion also provides
an opportunity to understand Knowledge Cycle and the blockages for free flow
of research information for both access and dissemination.

Thank you.

Swarna Bandara

HIFA2015 profile: Swarna Bandara is former Head of the Medical Library at
the University of the West Indies, Kingston, Jamaica. She is ETD/DSpace
Coordinator (ED/DSpace is an international repository for electonic theses
and dissertations), and Virtual Health Library National Coordinator. Her
professional interests include Open Access, Electronic publishing, Health
Science Information, and Information skills training. swarna.bandara AT
uwimona.edu.jm

[*Note from HIFA2015 moderator:
South Africa is not included in HINARI:
http://www.who.int/hinari/eligibility/en/
Thanks, Neil PW]

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