Published on in Vol 5, No 3 (2022): Jul-Sep

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/39365, first published .
An Evaluation of Primary Studies Published in Predatory Journals Included in Systematic Reviews From High-Impact Dermatology Journals: Cross-sectional Study

An Evaluation of Primary Studies Published in Predatory Journals Included in Systematic Reviews From High-Impact Dermatology Journals: Cross-sectional Study

An Evaluation of Primary Studies Published in Predatory Journals Included in Systematic Reviews From High-Impact Dermatology Journals: Cross-sectional Study

Journals

  1. Schiavo J. Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices of Health Sciences Faculty Towards Scholarly Open Access and Predatory Publishing. Medical Reference Services Quarterly 2024;43(3):243 View
  2. Ravi S, Zhou A, Sloan B, Bercovitch L, Grant-Kels J. Navigating the ethics of predatory journals and processing fees in dermatology. Clinics in Dermatology 2025;43(4):559 View
  3. Pulido M. Las revistas depredadoras: un grave riesgo para las publicaciones científicas. Medicina Clínica 2025;165(2):107036 View
  4. Sonis S, Villa A. The meta-analysis and systematic review mirage: when data synthesis becomes data distortion. Supportive Care in Cancer 2025;33(7) View
  5. Pulido M. Predatory journals: A serious risk for scientific publications. Medicina Clínica (English Edition) 2025;165(2):107036 View