Retractions serve as a critical self-corrective mechanism within the scientific enterprise, yet their implementation remains inconsistent and unevenly consequential across disciplines and institutions. This paper examines the causes, patterns, processes, and impacts of retractions. This paper accentuates that the retractions arise from a complex interplay of individual misconduct, systemic publication pressures, inadequate peer review, and cultural conditions that discourage honest error correction. Retraction notices are found to be frequently incomplete, poorly disseminated, and inconsistently linked across bibliographic databases, allowing flawed findings to persist in citation networks long after formal withdrawal. The paper further demonstrates that retraction impacts fall disproportionately on early-career researchers, particularly those in developing countries. These findings carry relevance for journals such as Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology, which publishes translational research with direct clinical and regulatory implications. The paper also is aligned with the goals of United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 3 (good health and well-being) and SDG 16 (peace, justice, and strong institutions), as strengthening scientific integrity infrastructure supports both evidence-based healthcare and accountable research governance. Concrete reforms are proposed, including standardized retraction notices and open-access policies, to ensure that retractions fulfill their promise as instruments of scientific self-correction.
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Louie Giray
Khazar University
Bench Fabros
Central Luzon State University
Jane Xavierine
INTI International University
INTI International University
Mapúa University
Khazar University
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Giray et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69f6e67c8071d4f1bdfc72f8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00210-026-05410-w