From China
medical field 107 articles are retracted
|
The result of a Chinese investigation
into a scandal in which a foreign medical journal retracted 107 papers from
China because of peer review fraud was announced by the Ministry of Science and
Technology on Thursday.
China
Daily/Xinhua report continues:
The
medical journal Tumor Biology, published by Springer Nature, retracted the
papers in April, after an investigation found the peer review process had been
compromised by using fabricated email addresses of reviewers.
Of
the 521 authors implicated, 11 were deemed innocent with 24 still under
investigation. Among the remaining authors, 486 authors were found guilty of
misconduct at various levels. A total of 102 were found to be mainly
responsible, 70 secondarily responsible and 314 did not participate in fraud,
said He Defang, a ministry official in charge of rule enforcement.
The
314 authors, who were found not guilty of fraud or benefiting from any
scientific and technological programs or awards, were blamed for neglecting the
management of academic achievements and paper publications.
In
the 107 papers published, two were repeat publications by the journal. One was
retracted by mistake and its authors were innocent. A total of 101 papers
fabricated peer reviews or reviewers, in which 95 were reviewed by fabricated
experts or had fake reviews provided by third-party institutions. Six had peer
reviews or reviewers fabricated by the authors, He said.
Twelve
of the 101 papers were purchased from third-party institutions, with the
remaining 89 papers completed by the authors themselves. Nine were fake in
content.
He
said that the fraud had severely damaged China's national image, and called for
a healthier academic environment and harsher punishment for academic misdeeds.
After
the scandal, a joint work group was formed by the MST, Ministry of Education,
National Health and Family Planning Commission, National Natural Science
Foundation, and China Association for Science and Technology to investigate the
issue.
The
work group maintained "zero tolerance" toward academic dishonesty, He
said.
Altogether,
376 authors involved in the scandal have been banned by their institutions from
undertaking research programs for various periods of time. They also had their
qualifications for promotion canceled, research funds retrieved, and awards and
honors revoked.
In addition, they will face punishment according to the Communist Party of China discipline regulations and the regulations on personnel from public institutions, He said.
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