I remember it was noticed at the time that the open peer review was not available but I notice now that there is a link to the peer review history saying they decided to exceptionally not make it open (a generic statement but that's what it says). Maybe it was already there but I don't remember this note about exceptional withholding of peer reviews, despite the journal's policy of open reviews. Then again my memory is terrible so whatever.New blog post from Nina E. Steinkopf: Music therapy study: BMJ refuses to publish critical comments
Doubt, uncertainty and criticism are the driving forces in science. Ensuring that patients are not harmed in research should be a top priority. We can only hope that BMJ’s editors change their minds and see the value in readers getting involved.
Reminds me of something I heard today about Fauci. This was in connection with a study on hydroxochloroquine:There's a note somewhere that says it was "externally peer-reviewed", which I have no idea what is supposed to mean. I guess it means something like "yeah we publish this but do not stand by any of it don't ask us we just work here"
New blog post from Nina E. Steinkopf: Music therapy study: BMJ refuses to publish critical comments
Doubt, uncertainty and criticism are the driving forces in science. Ensuring that patients are not harmed in research should be a top priority. We can only hope that BMJ’s editors change their minds and see the value in readers getting involved.
The comments from BMJ are excessively insulting and reflect a culture of ineptitude at the very goals of science. This was a fully politicized process, nothing scientific or legitimate here.Trial by Error by David Tuller: Update on BMJ's CBT-Music Therapy Study (h/t Steinkopf and Tack)
The investigators’ new version of the paper is still trash and it still stinks, for multiple reasons–including some that marred the first version. But at least it does not misrepresent itself as a feasibility study. However, in violation of its own stated policy, BMJ Paediatrics Open is refusing to post the peer reviews for this replacement version–even as it tells me in its latest letter (see below) that readers can be “reassured” about the robustness of its peer review process.
https://www.virology.ws/2020/11/25/...trics-open-about-the-cbt-music-therapy-study/On November 12, I received my latest letter from BMJ’s so-called research integrity office about the pile of potential research misconduct otherwise known as the pediatric study of cognitive behavior therapy and music therapy as a treatment for chronic fatigue after acute EBV. This study was published in April by BMJ Paediatrics Open and immediately came under sharp and justified criticism–including from me.
Earlier this week, I posted the letter I received from the research integrity office. I am posting it again below, along with my response. Of course, my beef isn’t with the research integrity coordinator. She’s just doing her job, presumably at the direction of BMJ higher-ups. The fault in this disaster lies squarely with those at the top, who seem to prefer obfuscation than transparency when addressing methodological and ethical lapses in papers published under the BMJ umbrella. At least, that has been my experience.