INVERTING THE EVIDENCE PYRAMID: THE THREATS OF UNREGULATED META-ANALYSES AND PREDATORY PUBLISHING BY UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS
Keywords:
Systematic Review, meta-analysis, research misconductAbstract
Walk down the historic corridors of Khyber Medical College (KMC) on any afternoon, and you will witness a profound shift in the conversations among our MBBS students. A decade ago, undergraduate research was largely confined to cross-sectional descriptive studies or basic knowledge-attitude-practice (KAP) surveys. Today, the ambition is vastly different. Driven by fierce global competition and residency match prerequisites, students from across Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) are bypassing local clinical research altogether. Instead, armed with laptops, institutional internet access, and a rudimentary, self-taught understanding of statistical software, they have set their sights on the peak of the traditional Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) hierarchy: the systematic review and meta-analysis.
In theory, this surge of academic enthusiasm should be celebrated as a victory for undergraduate medical research in Pakistan. In practice, however, it represents an alarming, unmonitored epidemic in academic publishing. It is not the case that these young, ambitious minds are attempting high-level syntheses and scientific curiosity; rather, the existential threat to modern medical literature lies in the global scientific community’s willingness to publish these unguided, structurally flawed manuscripts. Open-access journals across the globe have lowered barriers for fundamentally untrained undergraduate student groups working without robust, qualified academic mentorship. These predatory journals are actively undermining the scientific enterprise. In doing so, they risk permanently destabilizing the foundational EBM pyramid, reducing what should be our most secure evidence into our most unreliable noise.
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