# Amid Growing Evidence of Conflicts of Interest and Obdurate Groupthink in Medical Journals, Researchers Must Entertain Contrarian Ideas

**Authors:** Raphael Lataster, Peter Parry

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.77895 · 2025-01-23

## TL;DR

Medical journals are influenced by pharmaceutical industry interests, which can hinder scientific progress by suppressing alternative ideas.

## Contribution

The paper highlights the need for medical journals to embrace contrarian perspectives to counter industry-driven groupthink.

## Key findings

- Prestigious medical journals have significant financial conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry.
- Dominant narratives in medicine are often shaped by commercial influences, limiting awareness of alternative therapies.
- Adopting open policies for contrarian ideas could enhance scientific progress and patient care.

## Abstract

Mainstream medicine, like other academic fields, is shaped by prevailing paradigms and the dominant narratives they create. Over the past half-century, these paradigms have increasingly reflected the growing commercial influence of the pharmaceutical industry. Dominant narratives are closely tied to groupthink, to which medical journals are often subject. In addition, more “prestigious” medical journals tend to have further financial conflicts of interest with the pharmaceutical industry. These dynamics limit scientific progress by suppressing awareness of the iatrogenic aspects of industry products and the benefits of alternative non-patentable and unpatentable medical products and therapeutic interventions. Journals need to adopt a more open policy to manuscripts that encompass contrarian perspectives to dominant narratives while still adhering to time-tested scientific values and methods.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Coronavirus (MESH:D018352), depression (MESH:D003866), childbed fever (MESH:D005334), COVID (MESH:D000086382), drug-resistant epilepsy (MESH:D000069279), psychiatric disorders (MESH:D001523)
- **Chemicals:** carbohydrate (MESH:D002241), chlorine (MESH:D002713), Raphael Lataster (-)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11847147