Characteristics of Retractions from Korean Medical Journals in the KoreaMed Database: A Bibliometric Analysis.

Sun Huh, Soo Young Kim, Hye-Min Cho
Author Information
  1. Sun Huh: Department of Parasitology, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea. ORCID
  2. Soo Young Kim: Department of Family Medicine, Gangdong Sacred Heart Hospital, College of Medicine, Hallym University, Seoul, Korea. ORCID
  3. Hye-Min Cho: Infolumi Co., Seongnam, Korea.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Flawed or misleading articles may be retracted because of either honest scientific errors or scientific misconduct. This study explored the characteristics of retractions in medical journals published in Korea through the KoreaMed database.
METHODS: We retrieved retraction articles indexed in the KoreaMed database from January 1990 to January 2016. Three authors each reviewed the details of the retractions including the reason for retraction, adherence to retraction guidelines, and appropriateness of retraction. Points of disagreement were reconciled by discussion among the three.
RESULTS: Out of 217,839 articles in KoreaMed published from 1990 to January 2016, the publication type of 111 articles was retraction (0.051%). Of the 111 articles (addressing the retraction of 114 papers), 58.8% were issued by the authors, 17.5% were jointly issued (author, editor, and publisher), 15.8% came from editors, and 4.4% were dispatched by institutions; in 5.3% of the instances, the issuer was unstated. The reasons for retraction included duplicate publication (57.0%), plagiarism (8.8%), scientific error (4.4%), author dispute (3.5%), and other (5.3%); the reasons were unstated or unclear in 20.2%. The degree of adherence to COPE's retraction guidelines varied (79.8%-100%), and some retractions were inappropriate by COPE standards. These were categorized as follows: retraction of the first published article in the case of duplicate publication (69.2%), authorship dispute (15.4%), errata (7.7%), and other (7.7%).
CONCLUSION: The major reason for retraction in Korean medical journals is duplicate publication. Some retractions resulted from overreaction by the editors. Therefore, editors of Korean medical journals should take careful note of the COPE retraction guidelines and should undergo training on appropriate retraction practices.

References

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  2. Med J Aust. 2006 Aug 7;185(3):152-4 [PMID: 16893357]
  3. JAMA. 1998 Jul 15;280(3):296-7 [PMID: 9676689]
  4. J Korean Med Sci. 2014 Feb;29(2):172-5 [PMID: 24550641]
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  6. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Oct 16;109(42):17028-33 [PMID: 23027971]

MeSH Term

Bibliometrics
Biomedical Research
Duplicate Publications as Topic
Humans
Plagiarism
Republic of Korea
Retraction of Publication as Topic
Scientific Misconduct

Word Cloud

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