Methodology over metrics: current scientific standards are a disservice to patients and society

Publication date

2021-10

Authors

Van Calster, Ben
Wynants, Laure
Riley, Richard D.
van Smeden, MaartenORCID 0000-0002-5529-1541
Collins, Gary S.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Covid-19 research made it painfully clear that the scandal of poor medical research, as denounced by Altman in 1994, persists today. The overall quality of medical research remains poor, despite longstanding criticisms. The problems are well known, but the research community fails to properly address them. We suggest that most problems stem from an underlying paradox: although methodology is undeniably the backbone of high-quality and responsible research, science consistently undervalues methodology. The focus remains more on the destination (research claims and metrics) than on the journey. Notwithstanding, research should serve society more than the reputation of those involved. While we notice that many initiatives are being established to improve components of the research cycle, these initiatives are too disjointed. The overall system is monolithic and slow to adapt. We assert that top-down action is needed from journals, universities, funders and governments to break the cycle and put methodology first. These actions should involve the widespread adoption of registered reports, balanced research funding between innovative, incremental and methodological research projects, full recognition and demystification of peer review, improved methodological review of reports, adherence to reporting guidelines, and investment in methodological education and research. Currently, the scientific enterprise is doing a major disservice to patients and society.

Keywords

Methodology, Reporting, Research quality, Epidemiology

Citation

Van Calster, B, Wynants, L, Riley, R D, van Smeden, M & Collins, G S 2021, 'Methodology over metrics : current scientific standards are a disservice to patients and society', Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, vol. 138, pp. 219-226. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2021.05.018