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Published byShana Cain Modified over 9 years ago
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Balkanisation If you are a gastroenterologist the research that might matter to you may be in 30 different journals The difficulty of doing systematic reviews Important research articles are all over the place, some in Pubmed, many not Even if you can find the stuff, it costs a fortune to gather it all together (systematic review on research misconduct -£2000 to get photocopies)
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Slowness For many journals the time between submission and publication is over a year-- unacceptable
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Dangers of predicting the future I never make predictions, especially about the future. Sam Goldwyn Mayer
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Research will be made available for free on publicly accessible databases
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Journals in the new world Not “business as usual” but reinventing ourselves Probably far fewer Concentrate on meeting the needs of readers/ a community rather than authors
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Journals in the new world Rather than peer reviewing whatever is sent to them they would select relevant material from Pubmed Central and present it in an attractive way. (What the BMJ has always done). All the rest - education, debate, reviews, what’s on. Forum for debate “Be the glue that holds a community together”
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Journals in the new world Use all the possibilities of the electronic and paper world ELPS (electronic long, paper short) Online open review Copyright back to authors - each does what they want, payment to authors for reprints Benign publishers - low profit professional societies
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ELPS (Electronic long, paper short) Paper - easier, shorter, brighter, more fun, more readable Electronic full data, software, video, sound extra material links interactive updating immediate posting
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Problems with peer review Slow Expensive A lottery Ineffective Biased Easily abused Can’t detect fraud Works for improving studies not selecting which to publish Can’t detect fraud
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Towards online peer review Reviewers identity revealed to authors (RCT) Reviewers’ comments posted on the web of accepted papers (RCT underway) Reviewers’ comments posted as available Training reviewers (RCT)
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Vision of peer review “Peer review is changed from being an arbitrary decision made in a closed box to an open scientific discourse.”
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A vision of a better information tool for clinicians 1 Part of the information system that doctors use as they see patients Able to answer highly complex questions Connected to a large valid database Electronic Fast
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A vision of a better information tool for clinicians 2 Easy to use Portable Prompts doctors in a way that’s helpful not demeaning Connected to the patient record Gives evidence related to individual patients A servant of patients as well as doctors Provides psychological support
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Future of pharmaceutical advertising Currently nationally based Will become regional (European) and global Currently mostly on paper Problems with internet advertising –too easy to ignore –can turn it off –low click through rates
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Future of pharmaceutical advertising Will surely be “where the eyeballs are” May need to be more intrusive (pop up ads) Needs to be more imaginative Would you prefer to pay for an ad free journal or get a journal with ads for free?
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Research misconduct There’s a lot of it about Prevalence depends on definition A fifth of papers are published more than once Most authors have conflicts of interest but most don’t declare them Fabrification, falsification, and plagiarism are less common, but the Committee on Publication Ethics has dealt with 200 cases in five years
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Research misconduct It occurs because “Why wouldn’t it?” We need codes of good practice and training for prevention We need systems for investigation, judgement, punishment, research, and leadership--most countries don’t have them
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Overcoming the digital divide
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HINARI Three years old 45 publishers 113 countries, hundreds of institutions 1500 journals free or at low cost As good--if not better--access than in London, New York, or Paris Just rolled out to agriculture
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HINARI--challenges Improved access Training Local publishing Reaching the front line Information flow within the developing world and to the rich world Avoiding the information paradox Creating cultures of reading and debating
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Conclusions We do a bad job of meeting the information needs of doctors Medical journals are full of defects Various strong drivers mean that research studies will eventually be published on the web The role of journals will be to select what’s relevant and important and present it in a sexy way
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Conclusions Doctors will work all the time with information aids Peer review will become more open Pharmaceutical advertising will continue Research misconduct is endemic and needs a coherent response The digital divide is closing fast
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The future’s coming to crush you When the steamroller comes through you’re either part of the roller or part of the road. Stuart Brand
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