Centre for Journalology, Methodological and Implementation Research Program, The Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, Ottawa, Canada.
Department of Health Research Methods, Evidence, and Impact, Faculty of Health Sciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ONs, Canada.
Sci Rep. 2024 Nov 4;14(1):26626. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-77790-z.
Transparency within biomedical research is essential for research integrity, credibility, and reproducibility. To increase adherence to optimal scientific practices and enhance transparency, we propose the creation of a journal transparency tool (JTT) that will allow users to obtain information about a given scholarly journal's operations and transparency policies. This study is part of a program of research to obtain user preferences to inform the proposed JTT. Here, we report on our consultation with clinicians and researchers. This mixed-methods study was conducted in two parts. The first part involved a cross-sectional survey conducted on a random sample of authors from biomedical journals. The survey asked clinicians and researchers about the inclusion of a series of potential scholarly metrics and user features in the proposed JTT. Quantitative survey items were summarized with descriptive statistics. Thematic content analysis was employed to analyze text-based responses. Subsequent focus groups used survey responses to further explore the inclusion of items in the JTT. Items with less than 70% agreement were used to structure discussion points during these sessions. Participants voted on the use of user features and metrics to be considered within the journal tool after each discussion. Thematic content analysis was conducted on interview transcripts to identify the core themes discussed. A total of 632 participants (5.5% response rate) took part in the survey. A collective total of 74.7% of respondents found it either 'occasionally, 'often', or 'almost always' difficult to determine if health information online is based on reliable research evidence. Twenty-two participants took part in the focus groups. Three user features and five journal tool metrics were major discussion points during these sessions. Thematic analysis of interview transcripts resulted in six themes. The use of registration was the only item to not meet the 70% threshold after both the survey and focus groups. Participants demonstrated low scholarly communication literacy when discussing tool metric suggestions. Our findings suggest that the JTT would be valuable for both researchers and clinicians. The outcomes of this research will contribute to developing and refining the tool in accordance with researchers and clinicians.
生物医学研究的透明度对于研究的完整性、可信度和可重复性至关重要。为了提高对最佳科学实践的遵守程度并增强透明度,我们建议创建一个期刊透明度工具 (JTT),使用户能够获得有关特定学术期刊的运营和透明度政策的信息。这项研究是为了获得用户偏好以告知拟议的 JTT 而进行的研究计划的一部分。在这里,我们报告了与临床医生和研究人员的协商情况。这项混合方法研究分为两部分进行。第一部分是对生物医学期刊的随机作者样本进行的横断面调查。该调查询问了临床医生和研究人员是否在拟议的 JTT 中包含一系列潜在的学术指标和用户功能。对定量调查项目进行了描述性统计总结。使用主题内容分析对基于文本的回复进行了分析。随后的焦点小组使用调查回复进一步探讨了 JTT 中项目的纳入。同意率低于 70%的项目用于在这些会议期间构建讨论点。在每次讨论后,参与者对要在期刊工具中考虑的用户功能和指标进行投票。对访谈记录进行了主题内容分析,以确定讨论的核心主题。共有 632 名参与者(响应率为 5.5%)参加了调查。共有 74.7%的受访者表示,他们偶尔、经常或几乎总是难以确定在线健康信息是否基于可靠的研究证据。22 名参与者参加了焦点小组。在这些会议期间,有三个用户功能和五个期刊工具指标成为主要讨论点。对访谈记录的主题分析得出了六个主题。注册的使用是在调查和焦点小组之后都没有达到 70%门槛的唯一项目。参与者在讨论工具指标建议时表现出较低的学术交流素养。我们的研究结果表明,JTT 对研究人员和临床医生都很有价值。这项研究的结果将有助于根据研究人员和临床医生的意见来开发和完善该工具。