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8 April 2025 Strategic policy options to improve quality and productivity of biomedical research
E. Andrew Balas, Gianluca De Leo, Kelly B. Shaw
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Abstract

Emerging societal expectations from biomedical research and intensifying international scientific competition are becoming existential matters. Based on a review of pertinent evidence, this article analyzes challenges and formulates public policy recommendations for improving productivity and impact of life sciences. Critical risks include widespread quality defects of research, particularly non-reproducible results, and narrow access to scientifically sound information giving advantage to health misinformation. In funding life sciences, the simultaneous shift to nondemocratic societies is an added challenge. Simply spending more on research will not be enough in the global competition. Considering the pacesetter role of the federal government, five national policy recommendations are put forward: (i) funding projects with comprehensive expectations of reproducibility; (ii) public–private partnerships for contemporaneous quality support in laboratories; (iii) making research institutions accountable for quality control; (iv) supporting new quality filtering standards for scientific journals and repositories, and (v) establishing a new network of centers for scientific health communications.

E. Andrew Balas, Gianluca De Leo, and Kelly B. Shaw "Strategic policy options to improve quality and productivity of biomedical research," Politics and the Life Sciences 44(1), 108-119, (8 April 2025). https://doi.org/10.1017/pls.2024.10
Published: 8 April 2025
JOURNAL ARTICLE
12 PAGES

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KEYWORDS
biomedical research
health communication
health misinformation
international scientific competition
public policy
quality and reproducibility
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