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Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research: who's listening?
by
Moher, David
, Ravaud, Philippe
, Nasser, Mona
, Boutron, Isabelle
, Korevaar, Daniël A
, Graham, Ian D
, Glasziou, Paul
, Chalmers, Iain
, Bossuyt, Patrick M M
in
Biomedical research
/ Biomedical Research - standards
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Councils
/ Funding
/ Humans
/ Internal Medicine
/ Laboratory animals
/ Medical research
/ Medical wastes
/ Meetings
/ Regulators
/ Research Design - standards
/ Research Personnel
/ Researchers
/ Scientists
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
2016
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Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research: who's listening?
by
Moher, David
, Ravaud, Philippe
, Nasser, Mona
, Boutron, Isabelle
, Korevaar, Daniël A
, Graham, Ian D
, Glasziou, Paul
, Chalmers, Iain
, Bossuyt, Patrick M M
in
Biomedical research
/ Biomedical Research - standards
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Councils
/ Funding
/ Humans
/ Internal Medicine
/ Laboratory animals
/ Medical research
/ Medical wastes
/ Meetings
/ Regulators
/ Research Design - standards
/ Research Personnel
/ Researchers
/ Scientists
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research: who's listening?
by
Moher, David
, Ravaud, Philippe
, Nasser, Mona
, Boutron, Isabelle
, Korevaar, Daniël A
, Graham, Ian D
, Glasziou, Paul
, Chalmers, Iain
, Bossuyt, Patrick M M
in
Biomedical research
/ Biomedical Research - standards
/ Cooperative Behavior
/ Councils
/ Funding
/ Humans
/ Internal Medicine
/ Laboratory animals
/ Medical research
/ Medical wastes
/ Meetings
/ Regulators
/ Research Design - standards
/ Research Personnel
/ Researchers
/ Scientists
/ Studies
/ Systematic review
2016
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Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research: who's listening?
Journal Article
Increasing value and reducing waste in biomedical research: who's listening?
2016
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Overview
The biomedical research complex has been estimated to consume almost a quarter of a trillion US dollars every year. Unfortunately, evidence suggests that a high proportion of this sum is avoidably wasted. In 2014, The Lancet published a series of five reviews showing how dividends from the investment in research might be increased from the relevance and priorities of the questions being asked, to how the research is designed, conducted, and reported. 17 recommendations were addressed to five main stakeholders—funders, regulators, journals, academic institutions, and researchers. This Review provides some initial observations on the possible effects of the Series, which seems to have provoked several important discussions and is on the agendas of several key players. Some examples of individual initiatives show ways to reduce waste and increase value in biomedical research. This momentum will probably move strongly across stakeholder groups, if collaborative relationships evolve between key players; further important work is needed to increase research value. A forthcoming meeting in Edinburgh, UK, will provide an initial forum within which to foster the collaboration needed.
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