2020
DOI: 10.1162/qss_a_00076
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Pandemic publishing: Medical journals strongly speed up their publication process for COVID-19

Abstract: In times of public crises, including the current Covid-19 pandemic, rapid dissemination of relevant scientific knowledge is of paramount importance. The duration of scholarly journals’ publication process is one of the main factors that may hinder quick delivery of new information. Following initiatives of medical journals to accelerate their publication process, this study assesses whether medical journals have managed to speed up their publication process for Coronavirus related articles. It studies the dura… Show more

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Cited by 141 publications
(126 citation statements)
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“…Such timelines for disseminating findings are clearly incompatible with the lightning-quick progression of a pandemic. An analysis of publication timelines for 14 medical journals has shown that some publishers have taken steps to accelerate their publishing processes for COVID-19 research, reducing the time for the peer-review stage (submission to acceptance) on average by 45 days, and the editing stage (acceptance to publication) by 14 days [29], yet this still falls some way short of the ~1-3 day screening time for bioRxiv and medRxiv preprints (Fig. 2B).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such timelines for disseminating findings are clearly incompatible with the lightning-quick progression of a pandemic. An analysis of publication timelines for 14 medical journals has shown that some publishers have taken steps to accelerate their publishing processes for COVID-19 research, reducing the time for the peer-review stage (submission to acceptance) on average by 45 days, and the editing stage (acceptance to publication) by 14 days [29], yet this still falls some way short of the ~1-3 day screening time for bioRxiv and medRxiv preprints (Fig. 2B).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pressure to achieve the latter may result in a compromise of the former. This phenomenon, which has become acute in the COVID-19 era, has particularly serious reputational consequences for high-ranking journals additional experiments, and to shorten the revision period, suggesting that some peer review might be rushed and that some results might be too provisional or superficial, potentially lowering academic standards rather than upholding them (Eisen et al 2020;Horbach 2020). There are also risks of badly written, superficial and inaccurate systematic reviews (Yu et al 2020).…”
Section: Risks Of Select Publishing Practices During the Pandemicmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is thus a trade-off between the likelihood of accepting an unsound manuscript and the likelihood of rejecting a good manuscript. Minimizing the likelihood of a type I error will lead to very few papers being accepted for publication but this also results in numerous good papers being rejected for publication (Heckman and Moktan 2020). In order to reduce the risk of a type I error, Oller and Shaw (2020) advocated for research related to vaccine safety and analysis to be more rigorous, unbiased and independent.…”
Section: Measures Needed To Minimize Risks Associated With Covid-19 Lmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It will be a few years though before being able to analyze the retraction rate of COVID-related papers 5 by means of comparing it with a control group. Yet, the time from article submission to online publication of COVID-related articles accelerated remarkably in comparison to previous publication timeframes according to independent studies published in pre-print servers and in prestigious journals as well [6][7][8][9][10] . For example, two independent studies found that the median time to final acceptance was eight times faster for COVID-related articles as opposed to papers on other issues [8][9] .…”
Section: Editorialmentioning
confidence: 99%