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Larner College of Medicine in the Media

The following news and stories about LCOM appeared in local and/or national media.


Medscape Reports Retractions Following Ross Suspicions of Research Misconduct

February 10, 2023 by Lucy Gardner Carson

(FEBRUARY 10, 2023) Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry, shared “oddities” in two studies of antidepressant therapies by a team of researchers in Egypt with the journals that had published the studies. Now, almost a year later, one paper has been pulled and the other is still under review.

Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry

(FEBRUARY 10, 2023) Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry, shared what he described as “oddities” he noticed in two studies of antidepressant therapies by a team of researchers in Egypt with the journals that had published the studies. Now, almost a year later, one paper has been pulled and the other is still under review.

Both studies had impressive results, suggesting that in just a couple of years, the Egyptian researchers had discovered two treatments—metformin and cilostazol—that outperformed electric shock therapy. It didn’t take Ross long to conclude the data was fake.

Ross, who at the time was doing his residency in psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, said, “It’s been almost a year at this point since I originally raised the issue. I don’t think this was one where it took a lot of, you know, complex sleuthing, like doing statistical analysis or anything like that, to be very suspicious about these papers. So I certainly would have hoped it would have been done a lot sooner.”

Read full story at Medscape

Larner College of Medicine News

Recent news and stories from the college.

Medscape Reports Retractions Following Ross Suspicions of Research Misconduct

February 10, 2023 by Lucy Gardner Carson

(FEBRUARY 10, 2023) Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry, shared “oddities” in two studies of antidepressant therapies by a team of researchers in Egypt with the journals that had published the studies. Now, almost a year later, one paper has been pulled and the other is still under review.

Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry

(FEBRUARY 10, 2023) Eric Ross, M.D., assistant professor of psychiatry, shared what he described as “oddities” he noticed in two studies of antidepressant therapies by a team of researchers in Egypt with the journals that had published the studies. Now, almost a year later, one paper has been pulled and the other is still under review.

Both studies had impressive results, suggesting that in just a couple of years, the Egyptian researchers had discovered two treatments—metformin and cilostazol—that outperformed electric shock therapy. It didn’t take Ross long to conclude the data was fake.

Ross, who at the time was doing his residency in psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, said, “It’s been almost a year at this point since I originally raised the issue. I don’t think this was one where it took a lot of, you know, complex sleuthing, like doing statistical analysis or anything like that, to be very suspicious about these papers. So I certainly would have hoped it would have been done a lot sooner.”

Read full story at Medscape

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