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British Journal of Sports Medicine 2003;37:187; doi:10.1136/bjsm.37.2.187
Copyright © 2003 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine.
Br J Sports Med 2003;37:187
© 2003 BMJ Publishing Group & British Association of Sport and Exercise Medicine

LETTER

Reviewer diligence

E N Grosch

10888 Hammock Drive, Largo, FL 33774, USA; drgrosch@fastmail.fm

Keywords: journals; publication; fraud; peer review; statistical methods

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

I have just read your editorial "To review or not to review".1 I can attest to the dominant prevalence of gatekeepers among reviewers. I seem to encounter nothing but gatekeepers in my attempts to publish.

When I read your unique and astonishing admission that the "obsessive reviewer" who reanalyses the author’s data is "extraordinarily rare," I immediately thought, "Aha! Suspicions confirmed." The presumptive, rather presumptuous, confidence in medical editorial diligence that my mentors attempted to promulgate in my training at journal club meetings seems unjustified if, as you seem to imply, and as I have long suspected, editors and reviewers usually verify neither analyses nor conclusions of scientific submissions. If they don’t do that, what good are they? If they don’t do that, how can they justify publishing such results?

If the rarity of the "obsessive reviewer" is widespread, it, along with Sivakumaran’s letter on the "academic cartel",2 goes a . . . [Full text of this article]


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