2019
DOI: 10.1111/aas.13330
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Trustworthy systematic reviews–Can journals do more?

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Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Many authors and peer reviewers are volunteer health care professionals or trainees who lack formal training in evidence synthesis 46,53 . Informing them about research methodology could increase the likelihood they will apply rigorous methods 25,33,45 . We tackle this challenge, from both a theoretical and a practical perspective, by offering guidance applicable to any specialty.…”
Section: Part 1 the State Of Evidence Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many authors and peer reviewers are volunteer health care professionals or trainees who lack formal training in evidence synthesis 46,53 . Informing them about research methodology could increase the likelihood they will apply rigorous methods 25,33,45 . We tackle this challenge, from both a theoretical and a practical perspective, by offering guidance applicable to any specialty.…”
Section: Part 1 the State Of Evidence Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Editorials about unreliable or misleading systematic reviews highlight several of the intertwining factors that may contribute to continued publication of unreliable evidence syntheses: shortcomings and inconsistencies of the peer review process, lack of endorsement of current standards on the part of journal editors, the incentive structure of academia, industry influences, publication bias, and the lure of “predatory” journals 44-48 . At this juncture, clarification of the extent to which each of these factors contribute remains speculative, but their impact is likely to be synergistic.…”
Section: Part 1 the State Of Evidence Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Editorials about unreliable or misleading systematic reviews highlight several of the intertwining factors that may contribute to continued publication of unreliable evidence syntheses: shortcomings and inconsistencies of the peer review process, lack of endorsement of current standards on the part of journal editors, the incentive structure of academia, industry influences, publication bias, and the lure of "predatory" journals (Afshari & Møller, 2018;Butler et al, 2019;Clarke & Chalmers, 2018;Negrini et al, 2021;.…”
Section: Influences On the State Of Evidence Synthesismentioning
confidence: 99%