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What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored Programs February 20, 2013

What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

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Page 1: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance MonitorJanna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health SciencesOliva Smith, Division of Sponsored ProgramsFebruary 20, 2013

Page 2: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Today’s Discussion

• The Basics of the Public Access Policy• Awardee Tasks with Publications: Who does what?• My NCBI: Overview, Features, Benefits• Changes: the RPPR• Public Access Compliance Monitor: an Introduction• Compliance: 100 % or Bust.

Based on slides from NIH webinar “Changes to the NIH Public Access Policy and the Implications” Jan. 15, 2013: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/webinar_docs/webinar_20130115.htm

Page 3: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

The NIH Public Access Policy• The Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL

110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008) which states: The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-08-033 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-08-033.html

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-09-071 announces the policy is permanent, per the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2009 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-09-071.html

WHO

Page 4: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

The NIH Public Access Policy• The Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL

110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008) which states: The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-08-033 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-08-033.html

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-09-071 announces the policy is permanent, per the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2009 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-09-071.html

WHAT

Page 5: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

The NIH Public Access Policy• The Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL

110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008) which states: The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication,upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-08-033 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-08-033.html

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-09-071 announces the policy is permanent, per the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2009 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-09-071.html

WHEN

Page 6: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

The NIH Public Access Policy• The Policy implements Division G, Title II, Section 218 of PL

110-161 (Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2008) which states: The Director of the National Institutes of Health shall require that all investigators funded by the NIH submit or have submitted for them to the National Library of Medicine’s National Library of Medicine’s PubMed Central PubMed Central an electronic version of their final, peer-reviewed manuscripts upon acceptance for publication, to be made publicly available no later than 12 months after the official date of publication: Provided, That the NIH shall implement the public access policy in a manner consistent with copyright law.

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-08-033 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-08-033.html

• NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-09-071 announces the policy is permanent, per the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2009 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/NOT-OD-09-071.html

WHERE

Page 7: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

PubMed vs. PubMed Central

• Pub Med assigns citations a PMID number, which has nothing to do with the NIH Public Access Policy. Pub Med contains 22 million + citations (not full-text articles) from publications in MEDLINE, life science journals, online books, going back to 1966 and even some articles from the 1800s. PMID: 23314567 eight numerals

•PubMed Central PMC was launched 13 years ago as an online archive of full-text biomedical journal articles. It contains about 2.6 million full text articles. The NIH requires publications, supported by NIH research funding, to appear in PubMed Central within one year of the date of publication. Items in PubMed Central are assigned a PMCID.PMCID: PMC7654321 PMC followed by numerals (7 so far).

Page 8: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Definition: Article Types• Final Peer-Reviewed Manuscript

• Author’s final manuscript that includes all modifications from the peer-review process.

• Final Published Article• Journal’s authoritative copy of the paper.• Includes all modifications, copy edits, style edits, formatting

changes.• Not included in Policy: dissertations, conference proceedings,

books or book chapters.

Page 9: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Why Have Public Access?Easy access to published research funded by NIH will help advance science and improve human health.

• Meets the public’s expectation that articles based on NIH-funded research are publicly available1. Over 2.6 million articles are now in PMC. Every weekday, 700,000 users access the database, retrieving over 1.5 million articles.

• NIH can monitor, mine, and develop its portfolio of taxpayer funded research more effectively.

• NIH-funded research becomes more prominent, integrated and accessible, making it easier for all scientists to pursue NIH’s research priority areas competitively.

1. Harris Poll (2006) Most Americans back online access to federally funded research. Wall Street J Online Retrieved on July 20, 2006, from http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB114893698047965609-IMyQjAxMDE2NDM4MTkzMzE2Wj.html.

Page 10: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Awardee Tasks:• Determine if the Public Access Policy is applicable to the

paper.

• Deposit paper upon acceptance for publication.

• Document Compliance.

Page 11: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Awardee Tasks: Is it Applicable?

• Is peer-reviewed;

• Is accepted for publication in a journal on or after April 7, 2008;

• And, arises from:• Any direct funding from an NIH grant or cooperative agreement

active in Fiscal Year 2008 or beyond, or;• Any direct funding from an NIH contract signed on or after April

7, 2008, or;• Any direct funding from the NIH Intramural Program, or; • An NIH employee.

Page 12: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

CopyrightBefore author signs a publication agreement/copyright transfer

agreement, make SURE it allows the final peer-reviewed manuscript to be submitted to PMC in accordance with the Public Access Policy.

Hardin Library: Retain your Copyright http://guides.lib.uiowa.edu/content.php?pid=6167&sid=38873

Encourage authors to consider• What submission method will be used: i.e. who will submit the

paper & what version: final article or manuscript. Depends on publisher’s policy toward the NIH PA policy.

• When will it be submitted? • Who will approve the submission?• What is the delay? When will full-text appear in PMC?

Page 13: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Awardee Tasks: Deposit Paper• Deposit Paper Upon Acceptance for Publication

• Method A: Publish in journal that deposits all NIH-funded final published articles in PMC without author involvement. [Journal has agreement w NIH]

• Method B: Make arrangements to have a publisher deposit a specific final published article in PMC. [likely for $$]

• Method C: Deposit the final peer-reviewed manuscript in PMC yourself via the NIHMS.

• Method D: Complete the submission process for a final peer-reviewed manuscript that the publisher has deposited via the NIHMS.

• NOTE: a final published article goes directly into PMC without going through the NIHMS, the NIH manuscript submission system.

Page 14: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Submission Method Depends on Journalhttp://publicaccess.nih.gov/submit_process.htm

Method A Method B Method C Method D

Version of Paper Submitted

Final Published Article

Final Published Article

Final Peer-Reviewed Manuscript

Final Peer-Reviewed Manuscript

Task 1: Who deposits the paper?

Publisher direct to PMC

Publisher direct to PMC

Author or designee, via NIHMS

Publisher, via NIHMS

Task 2: Who approves paper for processing?

Not Applicable

Not Applicable Author, via NIHMS

Author, via NIHMS

Task 3: Who approves paper for PubMed Central upload?

Not Applicable

Not Applicable Author, via NIHMS

Author, via NIHMS

Participating journal/publisher

Method A Journals have agreement with NIH

Make arrangements with these publishers charge $$

Check publishing agreement

Make arrangements with these publishers

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Page 15: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Submission Method Depends on Journal

15

This only looks for

Method A journals. . .

Page 16: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Awardee Task: Document Compliance• Cite Article

• Include the PMC number (PMCID) for applicable papers in applications, proposals and reports, as described at http://publicaccess.nih.gov/citation_methods.htm.

The updates to My NCBI makes it easier to find citations. We will discuss My NCBI later in today’s presentation.

If you know the PMID, find if it has a PMCID or NIHMS ID using the converter link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/pmctopmid/ Use google.com to find: PMCID converter

Page 17: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Cite Articles Using PMCID• Include the PMCID (not PMID) at end of full citation.• Only applies to papers under the Policy, and authored or co-

authored by you or resulting from your NIH award.• For more information http://publicaccess.nih.gov/citation_methods.htm

Example: Varmus H, Klausner R, Zerhouni E, Acharya T, Daar A, Singer P. 2003. PUBLIC HEALTH: Grand Challenges in Global Health. Science 302(5644): 398–399. PMCID: PMC243493

Page 18: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Cite Articles in Process• For Method A and B Journals, use “PMC Journal - In Process”

if they don’t have the PMCID yet.• Basan M, Elgeti J, Hannezo E, Rappel WJ, Levine H. Alignment of

cellular motility forces with tissue flow as a mechanism for efficient wound healing. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2013 Jan 23. [Epub ahead of print] PMCID: PMC Journal - In Process

• Reminder: Method A & B Journals agree to post the final published article into PMC.

• You cannot use “PMC Journal – In Process” for Method C or Method D journal articles.

Page 19: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Cite Articles in Process• For Method C & D Journals, use the NIHMSID.

• Cerrato A, Parisi M, Santa Anna S, Missirlis F, Guru S, Agarwal S, Sturgill D, Talbot T, Spiegel A, Collins F, Chandrasekharappa S, Marx S, Oliver B. Genetic interactions between Drosophila melanogaster menin and Jun/Fos. Dev Biol. In press. NIHMSID: NIHMS44135

-> This article was sent to the NIHMS-PubMed Central system and is waiting for the PMCID. You CANNOT use the “In Process” for articles from Method C or D journals—won’t be accepted in the new RPPR.

• NIHMSIDs will not be accepted 3 months after publication. • If article goes through NIHMS smoothly (two approvals by authors)

PMCID assigned in approx. 7 – 10 days. • Please use the PMCID once it is assigned.

Page 20: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

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Who does what? Address Copyright?B Red, N Green, S Orange. Cellular motility as a mechanism for efficient wound healing. Peer Reviewed Journal. In Press. NIHMSID 123456

Dr. Red: NIH support for research in

paper

Dr. Orange: No NIH support

Dr. Green: Salary support from mentor’s

grant

Dr. Periwinkle:

Not an author, but

his NIH grant

supported an author

Page 21: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Who does what? Address Copyright?

• The awardee institution is responsible for ensuring the authors do not sign anything that prevents NIH PA compliance.

• Authors Red and Green need to be sure c/r agreement allows PA compliance.

• If authors do not comply: Dr. Periwinkle, whose grant supports the research, is on the hook.

Page 22: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

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Who deposits the manuscript to NIHMS- PMC?B Red, N Green, S Orange. Cellular motility as a mechanism for efficient wound healing. Peer Reviewed Journal. In Press. NIHMSID 123456

Dr. Red: NIH support for research in

paper

Dr. Orange: No NIH support

Dr. Green: Salary support from mentor’s

grant

Dr. Periwinkle:

Not an author, but

his NIH grant

supported an author

Page 23: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Who deposits the manuscript to NIHMS- PMC?• Any of the authors can send the manuscript to NIHMS-PMC –

even Dr. Orange, who is not supported by NIH funding.

• IMPORTANT: who is the “corresponding” author (usually the first), who must approve manuscript as it moves through the NIHMS toward deposit into PMC.

Page 24: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

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Who reports the paper in progress report?B Red, N Green, S Orange. Cellular motility as a mechanism for efficient wound healing. Peer Reviewed Journal. In Press. NIHMSID 123456

Dr. Red: NIH support for research in

paper

Dr. Orange: No NIH support

Dr. Green: Salary support from mentor’s

grant

Dr. Periwinkle:

Not an author, but

his NIH grant

supported an author

Page 25: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Who reports the paper in progress report?• Author Red used PMCID in progress report & biosketch.

• Author Green in biosketch.

• Dr. Periwinkle in report, biosketch

• If/when Dr. Orange applies for NIH grant, include the PMCID when citing this paper as previous work.

Page 26: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

When you need the PMCID

• If any of the authors of this paper, or the mentor, cite this paper when they apply for a new NIH award, they must include the PMCID. 

• However, when another investigator (who did not author this paper or whose grant did not support this work) cites this paper in a NIH grant application, they are not required to include the PMCID in the citation.  

Page 27: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Questions about the Public Access Policy?

Page 28: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Q & A (in case there are none from group)

• Can the author submit a .pdf of the published article if the journal would not normally submit the .pdf? Author may not own c/r of the published article—why the policy works with manuscripts.

• What if manuscript no longer available? Contact publisher and work out who sends published version to PMC.

• Does ‘direct funding’ apply only to prime awards, or to subawards or pass-throughs as well? Yes it applies to subawards/subcontracts. The issue is whether the funds directly apply to either the work that’s reported in the paper or directly supports the activities of the paper. Generally, if the PI feels the paper should be included in the publication report => direct funding.

Page 29: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Changes: Non-compliance, MyNCBINotice NOT-OD-12-160 http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/notice-files/not-od-

12-160.html

• Awards (non-competing continuation) will be placed on hold until grantees demonstrate compliance;

• Beginning with anticipated award start dates on/after July 1, 2013. http://nexus.od.nih.gov/all/2013/02/14/update-on-nihs-public-access-policy/

• Use of My NCBI will be required to report papers, when electronically submitting progress reports using the Research Performance Progress Report (RPPR).

• PDF report generated from My NCBI required when submitting paper progress reports using the form PHS 2590 (replaces publication section)

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Page 30: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

What is My NCBI?A tool integrated with PubMed (not PubMed Central) to track literature searches, collections of citations, and public access compliance.

•Must link eRA Commons accounts and MyNCBI (next slide)

•Once linked, users can associate publications with NIH grants.•Tracks NIH Public Access compliance•The only way to enter publications into RPPR•Creates the publications section (Section E) of PHS 2590s

•Other time savers: Delegation, options to share and publish bibliographies, automate searches, etc.

Page 31: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

How to Link eRA to MyNCBI

Sign in with eRA log in

Go to http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.

gov/sites/myncbi/

and sign in via the eRA login option.

Page 32: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

How to Link eRA to MyNCBI

• Either: Link previously established MyNCBI account to your eRA Commons account by entering the MyNCBI username/pw;

• Or create new MyNCBI account and link it automatically to the eRA Commons account.

• Once the accounts are linked, logging in to eRA Commons will also log you into MyNCBI.

Page 33: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored
Page 34: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Manage my Bibliography

Page 35: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

OR—if you are NOT logged in, first find publications on PubMed and then click to log in to MyNCBI . . .

Page 36: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

. . . Click “Send to” to see the drop down selections. “Add to My Bibliography” button.

Check the boxes next to citations you want to

add.

Page 37: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Award View

Page 38: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

codesPPAs seen in My Bibliography, the ‘Award View’ color codes citations for Public Access compliance

Page 39: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Delegating in My Bibliography

PI adds email address of delegate(s).

System sends out invitation for delegate to accept.

PI can assign more than one delegate.

Once delegate accepts, delegate can log in to manage

bibliography for PI.Delegate can log in/manage for

more than one PI.

Page 40: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Managing Center Grants• MyNCBI tracks the numerous publications from numerous

researchers supported by a large grant such as a center grant.

• When the PI of the center grant files her/his report, all publications are properly associated with the grant.

Page 41: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

MyNCBI Reduces Work for PI• Automated, Collaborative Methods to Track Publications

- Import citations directly from PubMed- Automated matches of manuscript citations to

PubMed records- NIHMS paper-grant suggestions- Recommendations from other authors- Paper- grant associations by other authors

* Continuous management* Award View: PA compliance status for every record

Page 42: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

My NCBI Questions?

Page 43: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Research Progress Performance Report• RPPR: replacing the PHS 2590 for Non-competing

Continuation Progress reports and the PHS 416-9 for Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Individual Fellowship Progress Report for Continuation Support.

• NIH is transitioning use of the eSNAP to the RPPR.

• RPPR special features, instructions, screen shots, FAQs: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/RPPR/

Page 44: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Research Progress Performance Report• Other PHS agencies (FDA, CDC, AHRQ) using PHS 2590 may

have different requirements than the NIH; refer to the Notice of Award.

• RPPR is not used for Final Progress Report. For submitting Final Progress Report, see: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/funding/finalprogressreport.pdf

Page 45: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Why change to the RPPR?• RPPR is more automated.

• Compliance rates were slowing• Pilot with the RPPR showed papers reported in publication

section were more likely to have PMCIDs.

Page 46: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Display on RPPR

46

Only way to enter publications to RPPR is via My NCBI

10

Page 47: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Non-compliant papers => email

• When grantee submits RPPR to NIH with publication that is not compliant (no PMCID or NIHMS or “In Process”), the system generates email to PI with cc: to Admin officer, signing official, Grant mgmt person at the NIH as well as the Institute/Center managing the grant.

• PRAM Progress Report Additional Materials – provide PMCID, explanation.

Page 48: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Questions about the RPPR’s role in achieving Public Access Policy

compliance?

Page 49: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

PA Compliance Monitor• Public Access Compliance Monitor is web-based tool used by

designees at the institution to track PA compliance of publications.

• To use: requires PACR role in eRA Commons.

• Log in: http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/utils/pacm/

Page 50: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Institutional Summary -week

Page 51: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Institutional Summary - total

Page 52: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

2. Stalled in NIHMS

1. Many have not started the process

in NIHMS-PMC.

Click

Page 53: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Stalled: awaiting final of two approvals in the NIHMS.

Page 54: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Avoid Delays in Compliance• Encourage investigators to:

• Use My NCBI now to track PA compliance.• Associate papers with awards today.• Ensure compliance well before their annual reports are due and

avoid last-minute.• Find out journal’s policy when submitting, and start the process

as soon as accepted.

Page 55: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Avoid Delays in Compliance• Encourage investigators to:

• Log in http://www.nihms.nih.gov/db/sub.cgi to find if any articles are Stalled in NIHMS, awaiting initial or final approval before PMC assigned.

• Investigators will see only those articles in NIHMS.

In other words: MANY articles are not even in the NIHMS, so have not started the road to PubMed Central deposit. UI = +600

Page 56: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

100% or Bust: How to Get There?

• The PAC monitor allows me to download as a CVS file and sort by PI name.

• I plan to send out to the PIs info about journal articles associated with them, along with how to “get it going” or remove if not applicable.

Page 57: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Questions on the Public Access Compliance

Monitor?

Page 58: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

NIH Contacts • NIH Public Access Policy Online

• Email: [email protected] • NIH Public Access Policy: http://publicaccess.nih.gov• Upcoming Changes: NIH Guide Notice NOT-OD-12-160• eRA Help: http://era.nih.gov/help/ • NCBI: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/About/glance/contact_info.html

Today’s presentation was adapted from webinar 1/15/13: http://grants.nih.gov/grants/webinar_docs/webinar_20130115.htm

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Page 59: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Thank you• Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library HLHS

[email protected] 5-9870

• Hardin Library Public Access Policy webpage http://guides.lib.uiowa.edu/nihpublicaccess

• Oliva Smith, Div. of Sponsored Programs [email protected] 5-3708.

Page 60: What’s New: Public Access Policy, the RPPR and Compliance Monitor Janna Lawrence, Hardin Library for the Health Sciences Oliva Smith, Division of Sponsored

Questions and Discussion