http://bmj.com/cgi/content/full/323/7314/651
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The conference heard from Doug Altman, statistical adviser to the BMJ, how
medical journals continue to be full of serious methodological
errors, meaning that many studies reach false conclusions. The
problem was identified many years ago, and yet there have been few
improvements. Medical research is too often done by untrained people
for the wrong reasons, including career advancement.
Four years ago Rennie argued the need for journals to adopt open peer review
systems, whereby authors and eventually readers know the identity of
reviewers. "The ethical arguments against open peer review are
disgraceful," he said, "and yet hardly any journals have
opened up their peer review process." The BMJ and the British
Journal of Psychiatry are almost alone among established journals in
having done so.
Rennie has also argued for the need to move from a system of authorship to
contributorship
where contributors to a study describe exactly
what they did. The International Committee of Medical Journal
Editors now supports such descriptions, and many journals have
adopted the system.
Journals should also be moving, Rennie argues, towards prepublication review
by readers and encouraging authors to update their studies. Almost
no progress has been made with either issue.
He then lambasted editors for "giving no time, energy, and thought to
their craft." It was "pretty disgraceful" that so few editors
had turned up to the only conference that looked at the evidence
base for their craft. There may be 15000 journal editors, and
yet fewer than 400 had booked for the conference.
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Footnotes
Congress on peer review in biomedical publication Reports by Richard Smith
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Read all Rapid Response
responses
Medical editor lambasts journals and editors
Nancy Medina, Editorial Director,
Annals of Emergency Medicine , American College of Emergency Physicians
bmj.com, 21 Sep 2001 [Response]
How to have your paper reviewed successfully: ask a
friend
D. Banks, scientist , University
of Singapore
bmj.com, 21 Sep 2001 [Response]
Editors are human too
Pramod Bapat, Consultant in
Anaesthetics , Arrowe Park Hospital
bmj.com, 22 Sep 2001 [Response]
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