Feature

Popular book by USC oncologist pulled because of plagiarism


 

Sales of a best-selling health book by a high-profile University of Southern California, Los Angeles, oncologist have been suspended because of dozens of instances of plagiarism.

The Los Angeles Times reported earlier this week that it identified at least 95 instances of plagiarism by author David B. Agus, MD, in “The Book of Animal Secrets: Nature’s Lessons for a Long and Happy Life.”

According to the LA Times, Dr. Agus copied passages from numerous sources, including The New York Times, National Geographic, Wikipedia, and smaller niche sites. Some instances involved a sentence or two; others involved multiparagraph, word-for-word copying without attribution.

The book by Dr. Agus – who interviews celebrities for a health-related miniseries on Paramount Plus – had reached the top spot on Amazon’s list of best-selling books about animals a week before its planned March 7 release.

Publisher Simon & Schuster released a statement announcing a recall of the book at Dr. Agus’ expense “until a fully revised and corrected edition can be released.”

Dr. Agus included his own statement apologizing “to the scientists and writers whose work or words were used or not fully attributed,” and said he will “rewrite the passages in question with new language, will provide proper and full attribution, and when ready will announce a new publication date.”

“Writers should always be credited for their work, and I deeply regret these mistakes and the lack of rigor in finalizing the book,” he stated, adding that “[t]his book contains important lessons, messages, and guidance about health that I wanted to convey to the readers. I do not want these mistakes to interfere with that effort.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Recommended Reading

Doctors and their families tend to ignore medical guidelines
MDedge Family Medicine
Physician group staffing down, expenses up, new reports show
MDedge Family Medicine
How spirituality guides these three doctors
MDedge Family Medicine
Physicians and clinicians should be required to get flu shots: Ethicist
MDedge Family Medicine
Physician pleads guilty to 52 counts in opioid scheme
MDedge Family Medicine
Docs struggle to keep up with the flood of new medical knowledge. Here’s advice
MDedge Family Medicine
NP-PA turf fights: Where the relationship can improve
MDedge Family Medicine
Med center and top cardio surgeon must pay $8.5 million for fraud, concurrent surgeries
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA expands abemaciclib use in high-risk early breast cancer
MDedge Family Medicine
HER2-low breast cancer is not a separate clinical entity: Study
MDedge Family Medicine