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All That Glitters Isn't Gold: A Survey on Acknowledgment of Limitations in Biomedical Studies

Authors :
Steven N. Goodman
Tsung Yu
Elie A. Akl
Milo A. Puhan
Paula Chesley
Nadine Heller
Bernd Richter
Martin Umbehr
Alan G. Gross
Lizzy M. Brewster
Lara Siebeling
Gerben ter Riet
Patrick Muggensturm
Sonal Singh
Olaf M. Dekkers
Daniela Vollenweider
Ingrid Mühlhauser
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
General practice
AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
General Internal Medicine
University of Zurich
Source :
PLoS ONE, 8(11). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, 8(11), PLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 11, p e73623 (2013)
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

BackgroundAcknowledgment of all serious limitations to research evidence is important for patient care and scientific progress. Formal research on how biomedical authors acknowledge limitations is scarce.ObjectivesTo assess the extent to which limitations are acknowledged in biomedical publications explicitly, and implicitly by investigating the use of phrases that express uncertainty, so-called hedges; to assess the association between industry support and the extent of hedging.DesignWe analyzed reporting of limitations and use of hedges in 300 biomedical publications published in 30 high and medium -ranked journals in 2007. Hedges were assessed using linguistic software that assigned weights between 1 and 5 to each expression of uncertainty.ResultsTwenty-seven percent of publications (81/300) did not mention any limitations, while 73% acknowledged a median of 3 (range 1-8) limitations. Five percent mentioned a limitation in the abstract. After controlling for confounders, publications on industry-supported studies used significantly fewer hedges than publications not so supported (p = 0.028).LimitationsDetection and classification of limitations was--to some extent--subjective. The weighting scheme used by the hedging detection software has subjective elements.ConclusionsReporting of limitations in biomedical publications is probably very incomplete. Transparent reporting of limitations may protect clinicians and guideline committees against overly confident beliefs and decisions and support scientific progress through better design, conduct or analysis of new studies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE, 8(11). Public Library of Science, PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, 8(11), PLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 11, p e73623 (2013)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....330f65cd3ff0d126da1d849421aa0a9c