Flutterby™! : Bias, journals and results

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Bias, journals and results

2013-09-07 15:38:03.2388+02 by Dan Lyke 0 comments

BMJ Research: “Hardly worth the effort”? Medical journals’ policies and their editors’ and publishers’ views on trial registration and publication bias: quantitative and qualitative study.

Results Only 55/200 journals (28%) required trial registration according to their instructions and a further three (2%) encouraged it. The editors and publishers interviewed explained their journals’ reluctance to require registration in terms of not wanting to lose out to rival journals, not wanting to reject otherwise sound articles or submissions from developing countries, and perceptions that such policies were not relevant to all journals. Some interviewees considered that registration was unnecessary for small or exploratory studies.

Or: ¾ of medical journals are encouraging a system where you can pick and choose whether or not to publish a study based on whether you want to promote its results or not.

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