Public Health, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMJ Open. 2019 May 15;9(5):e027903. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-027903.
Explore the occurrence and nature of questionable research practices (QRPs) in the reporting of messages and conclusions in international scientific Health Services Research (HSR) publications authored by researchers from HSR institutions in the Netherlands.
In a joint effort to assure the overall quality of HSR publications in the Netherlands, 13 HSR institutions in the Netherlands participated in this study. Together with these institutions, we constructed and validated an assessment instrument covering 35 possible QRPs in the reporting of messages and conclusions. Two reviewers independently assessed a random sample of 116 HSR articles authored by researchers from these institutions published in international peer-reviewed scientific journals in 2016.
Netherlands, 2016.
116 international peer-reviewed HSR publications.
Median number of QRPs per publication, the percentage of publications with observed QRP frequencies, occurrence of specific QRPs and difference in total number of QRPs by methodological approach, type of research and study design.
We identified a median of six QRPs per publication out of 35 possible QRPs. QRPs occurred most frequently in the reporting of implications for practice, recommendations for practice, contradictory evidence, study limitations and conclusions based on the results and in the context of the literature. We identified no differences in total number of QRPs in papers based on different methodological approach, type of research or study design.
Given the applied nature of HSR, both the severity of the identified QRPs, and the recommendations for policy and practice in HSR publications warrant discussion. We recommend that the HSR field further define and establish its own scientific norms in publication practices to improve scientific reporting and strengthen the impact of HSR. The results of our study can serve as an empirical basis for continuous critical reflection on the reporting of messages and conclusions.
探讨由荷兰卫生服务研究(HSR)机构的研究人员撰写的国际 HSR 出版物中报告信息和结论部分出现的有问题的研究行为(QRPs)的发生情况和性质。
为了确保荷兰 HSR 出版物的整体质量,荷兰的 13 家 HSR 机构共同参与了这项研究。我们与这些机构一起,构建并验证了一个评估工具,涵盖了报告信息和结论中 35 种可能存在的 QRPs。两位评审员独立评估了这些机构的研究人员在 2016 年发表在国际同行评议的科学期刊上的 116 篇 HSR 文章的随机样本。
荷兰,2016 年。
116 篇国际同行评议的 HSR 出版物。
每篇出版物出现 QRPs 的中位数、观察到 QRPs 频率的出版物比例、特定 QRPs 的发生情况以及方法学方法、研究类型和研究设计对总 QRPs 数量的差异。
我们在 35 个可能的 QRPs 中确定了每篇出版物出现 6 个 QRPs 的中位数。QRPs 最常出现在报告实践意义、实践建议、矛盾证据、研究局限性和基于结果和文献背景的结论中。我们没有发现基于不同方法学方法、研究类型或研究设计的论文中 QRPs 总数的差异。
鉴于 HSR 的应用性质,所确定的 QRPs 的严重程度以及对 HSR 出版物的政策和实践的建议都需要讨论。我们建议 HSR 领域进一步定义和建立其自身在出版实践中的科学规范,以提高科学报告质量并增强 HSR 的影响力。我们研究的结果可以为不断对信息和结论的报告进行批判性反思提供实证基础。