Medical paper was forced to retract an article published.
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Retraction of a Medical Article: An Overview
Title:
Retraction of a Medical Article: An Overview
Summary:
The National Library of Medicine (NLM) is the world’s largest medical library, offering a wealth of resources through its History of Medicine Division. While “Locator” serves as a catalog, it does not include serial and periodical contents. More comprehensive tools are essential for accessing medical journal articles.
Article Body:
Access to extensive medical literature is facilitated by numerous university library catalogs available online. Prominent among these is the National Library of Medicine (NLM), the largest medical library globally, and the Library of Congress (LC). The NLM’s History of Medicine Division offers a dedicated homepage for additional resources, though its “Locator” catalog does not detail serial and periodical contents. Thus, accessing journal articles necessitates other resources.
A widely used computer-based system in medicine is NLM’s MEDLARS, established in 1964. The MEDLINE (MEDLARS online) database, accessible freely through the NLM homepage, is the most frequently used tool for exploring medical literature.
MEDLINE’s archives, however, are limited, as they do not include references to literature published prior to 1964, posing a constraint for historical research. Although initiatives are underway to digitize older medical literature, currently, printed bibliographies remain crucial for sourcing pre-1964 literature. HISTLINE, accessible without charge via the NLM History of Medicine Division homepage, caters to the history of medicine. It enriches MEDLINE by adding references to historical literature absent from the MEDLINE database. Despite this, HISTLINE includes only material published from 1970 onwards, necessitating the use of printed bibliographies for earlier historical literature.
Applications can be submitted in various categories with different author classifications, including family physicians in academic medicine, clinical practitioners, residents, medical students, international attendees, and professionals in medical informatics.
Studies indicate that nearly half of all journal articles are penned by ghostwriters. Physicians lending their names to these articles may receive significant compensation, while the contributing ghostwriters and associated pharmaceutical companies often remain undisclosed.
An instance of this was an article in the Journal of Alimentary Pharmacology, which did not disclose the involvement of a medical writer from AstraZeneca.
In February, the New England Journal of Medicine retracted a previous year's article by scholars from Imperial College London and the National Heart Institute. The retraction followed revelations that several listed authors contributed minimally to the research. The deceit came to light when Dr. Hubert Seggewiss, a listed German cardiologist, informed the journal’s editor that he had never reviewed any version of the paper.
Tag: Medical Paper
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