Literature DB >> 27129625

Peer review in medical journals: Beyond quality of reports towards transparency and public scrutiny of the process.

Paolo Vercellini1, Laura Buggio2, Paola Viganò3, Edgardo Somigliana4.   

Abstract

Published medical research influences health care providers and policy makers, guides patient management, and is based on the peer review process. Peer review should prevent publication of unreliable data and improve study reporting, but there is little evidence that these aims are fully achieved. In the blinded systems, authors and readers do not know the reviewers' identity. Moreover, the reviewers' reports are not made available to readers. Anonymous peer review poses an ethical imbalance toward authors, who are judged by masked referees, and to the medical community and society at large, in case patients suffer the consequences of acceptance of flawed manuscripts or erroneous rejection of important findings. Some general medical journals have adopted an open process, require reviewers to sign their reports, and links online pre-publication histories to accepted articles. This system increases editors' and reviewers' accountability and allows public scrutiny, consenting readers understand on which basis were decisions taken and by whom. Moreover, this gives credit to reviewers for their apparently thankless job, as online availability of signed and scored reports may contribute to researchers' academic curricula. However, the transition from the blind to the open system could pose problems to journals. Reviewers may be more difficult to find, and publishers or medical societies could resist changes that may affect editorial costs and journals' revenues. Nonetheless, also considering the risk of competing interests in the medical field, general and major specialty journals could consider testing the effects of open review on manuscripts regarding studies that may influence clinical practice.
Copyright © 2016 European Federation of Internal Medicine. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Blind peer review; Conflict of interest; Medical publishing; Open peer review

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27129625     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejim.2016.04.014

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Intern Med        ISSN: 0953-6205            Impact factor:   4.487


  3 in total

1.  Collective Conversational Peer Review of Journal Submission: A Tool to Integrate Medical Education and Practice.

Authors:  Vivek Podder; Amy Price; Madhava Sai Sivapuram; Ashwini Ronghe; Srija Katta; Avinash Kumar Gupta; Rakesh Biswas
Journal:  Ann Neurosci       Date:  2018-04-03

2.  Publishing of COVID-19 preprints in peer-reviewed journals, preprinting trends, public discussion and quality issues.

Authors:  Ivan Kodvanj; Jan Homolak; Davor Virag; Vladimir Trkulja
Journal:  Scientometrics       Date:  2022-01-31       Impact factor: 3.801

Review 3.  Revisiting selected ethical aspects of current clinical in vitro fertilization (IVF) practice.

Authors:  Anja von Schondorf-Gleicher; Lyka Mochizuki; Raoul Orvieto; Pasquale Patrizio; Arthur S Caplan; Norbert Gleicher
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2022-02-22       Impact factor: 3.412

  3 in total

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