Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
CONTEXT: Some journals routinely query potential referees before sending manuscripts ("askfirst"), whereas others just send manuscripts and allow referees to opt out ("justsend"). It is not known which protocol results in more completed reviews or shorter review time. METHODS: Trial to assess proportion of referee turndowns and length of review process, conducted at editorial office of Obstetrics could opt out). RESULTS: Only 64% of askfirst referees assented initially (15% declined vs 8% for justsend, P =.008 and 21% failed to respond within 3 working days, necessitating a replacement). But once manuscript was mailed, mean time to file a review was significantly shorter for askfirst (21.0 vs 25.0 days, P<.001); thus, overall time to receipt of review did not differ significantly (24.7 vs 25.9 days, P =.19), nor did review quality (P =.39). CONCLUSION: Askfirst led to a higher rate of referee turndown than did justsend, but assenting askfirst referees completed reviews faster. The overall time for the review process did not differ between the 2 protocols.
Pitkin et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched one closely related paper. Consider it for comparative context: