Dies ist eine Übersichtsseite mit Metadaten zu dieser wissenschaftlichen Arbeit. Der vollständige Artikel ist beim Verlag verfügbar.
Up front and open, shrouded in secrecy, or somewhere in between? A Meta Research Systematic Review of Open Science Practices in Sport Medicine Research
2
Zitationen
21
Autoren
2023
Jahr
Abstract
Abstract Objective To investigate the extent and qualitatively synthesize open science practices within research published in the top five sports medicine journals from 01 May 2022 and 01 October 2022. Design Meta-research systematic review Data Sources MEDLINE Eligibility Criteria Studies were included if they were published in one of the identified top five sports medicine journals as ranked by Clarivate. Studies were excluded if they were systematic reviews, qualitative research, grey literature, or animal or cadaver models. Results 243 studies were included. The median number of open science practices met per study was 2, out of a maximum of 12 (Range: 0-8; IQR: 2). 234 studies (96%, 95% CI: 94-99) provided an author conflict of interest statement and 163 (67%, 95% CI: 62-73) reported funding. 21 studies (9%, 95% CI: 5-12) provided open access data. 54 studies (22%, 95% CI: 17-included a data availability statement and 3 (1%, 95% CI: 0-3) made code available. 76 studies (32%, 95% CI: 25-37) had transparent materials and 30 (12%, 95% CI: 8-16) included a reporting guideline. 28 studies (12%, 95% CI: 8-16) were pre-registered. 6 studies (3%, 95% CI: 1-4) published a protocol. 4 studies (2%, 95% CI: 0-3) reported the availability of an analysis plan. 7 studies (3%, 95% CI: 1-5) reported patient and public involvement. Conclusion Sports medicine open science practices are extremely limited. The least followed practices were sharing code, data, and analysis plans. Without implementing open practices, barriers concerning the ability to aggregate findings and create cumulative science will continue to exist. What is already known Open science practices provide a mechanism for evaluating and improving the quality and reproducibility of research in a transparent manner, thereby enhancing the benefits to patient outcomes and society at large. Understanding the current open science practices in sport medicine research can assist in identifying where and how sports medicine leadership can raise awareness, and develop strategies for improvement. What are the new findings No study published in the top five sports medicine journals met all open science practices Studies often only met a small number of open science practices Open science practices that were least met included providing open access code, data sharing, and the availability of an analysis plan.
Ähnliche Arbeiten
The PRISMA 2020 statement: an updated guideline for reporting systematic reviews
2021 · 84.856 Zit.
Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses: the PRISMA statement
2009 · 82.787 Zit.
The Measurement of Observer Agreement for Categorical Data
1977 · 76.851 Zit.
Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses: The PRISMA Statement
2009 · 62.738 Zit.
Measuring inconsistency in meta-analyses
2003 · 61.458 Zit.
Autoren
- Garrett S. Bullock
- Patrick S. Ward
- Franco M. Impellizzeri
- Stefan Kluzek
- Tom Hughes
- Charles C. Hillman
- Brian R. Waterman
- Kerry A. Danelson
- Kaitlin Henry
- Emily Barr
- Kelsey Healey
- Anu M. Räisänen
- Christina Gomez
- Garrett Fernandez
- Jakob Wolf
- Kristen F. Nicholson
- Tim Sell
- Ryan Zerega
- Paula Dhiman
- Richard D Riley
- Gary S. Collins
Institutionen
- Wake Forest University(US)
- University of Calgary(CA)
- University of Oxford(GB)
- Versus Arthritis(GB)
- University of Technology Sydney(AU)
- University of Nottingham(GB)
- English Institute of Sport(GB)
- Manchester Metropolitan University(GB)
- Western University of Health Sciences(US)
- Atrium Medical Cente(US)
- Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre(GB)
- University of Birmingham(GB)