Abstract

BackgroundThere is much concern regarding undisclosed corporate authorship (“ghostwriting”) in the peer-reviewed medical literature. However, there are no studies of how disclosure of ghostwriting alone impacts the perceived credibility of research results.FindingsWe conducted a randomized vignette study with experienced nurses (n = 67), using a fictional study of antidepressant medication. The vignette described a randomized controlled trial and gave efficacy and adverse effect rates. Participants were randomly assigned to one of two authorship conditions, either (a) traditional authorship (n = 35) or (b) ghostwritten paper (n = 32), and then completed a perceived credibility scale. Our primary hypothesis was that the median perceived credibility score total would be lower in the group assigned to the ghostwritten paper. Our secondary hypotheses were that participants randomized to the ghostwritten condition would be less likely to (a) recommend the medication, and (b) want the psychiatrist in the vignette as their own clinician. We also asked respondents to estimate efficacy and adverse effect rates for the medication.There was a statistically significant difference in perceived credibility among those assigned to the ghostwriting condition. This amounted to a difference of 9.0 points on the 35-point perceived credibility scale as tested through the Mann–Whitney U test. There was no statistically significant difference between groups in terms of recommending the medication, wanting the featured clinician as their own, or in estimates of efficacy or adverse effects (p > .05 for all such comparisons).ConclusionIn this study, disclosure of ghostwriting resulted in lower perceived credibility ratings.

Highlights

  • There is much concern regarding undisclosed corporate authorship (“ghostwriting”) in the peer-reviewed medical literature

  • We opted not to change vignette content substantially because we had found evidence of face validity in our earlier study; ghostwriting experts agreed that these vignettes described a ghostwriting incident “similar to those known to have occurred in real life” and agreed that a clinician reading the scientific literature would be “likely to come across studies that were generated in a manner similar to that described” [19]

  • Sixty-seven nurses participated in this study, meaning that our study was underpowered according to our prestudy power analysis

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Summary

Objectives

The title of the project was “Perceptions of Biomedical Research” and participants were not aware that the goal of the project was to examine the impact of ghostwriting on perceived credibility

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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