After retractions of two Covid-19 papers, scientists ask what went wrong – STAT

With last weeks retractions of two Covid-19 papers from a pair of the worlds top medical journals, the scientific community is once again wrestling withthe question that arises any time ahigh-profile publication blows up: Could this have been prevented?

Entire forests have been felled so scholars can write papers on the flawed process of peer review, in which journal editors ask (usually three) outside experts to read a manuscript for rigor, methodological soundness, consistency, and overall quality. Peer review is rife with gender bias. Reviewers try to block competitors papers. They steal ideas. They favor authors from prestigious institutions. The process is hardly better than chance at keeping bad studies from being published. It does little to improve papers.

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After retractions of two Covid-19 papers, scientists ask what went wrong - STAT

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