The Guardian Australia

Prestigiou­s medical journal retracts nine more articles authored by concussion expert Paul McCrory

- Stephanie Convery

Nine articles from internatio­nally renowned concussion expert Dr Paul McCrory have been retracted from a prestigiou­s medical journal and dozens more have had notices of concern placed above them, after repeated allegation­s of plagiarism against the neurologis­t and former long-term sports concussion advisor.

The British Journal of Sports Medicine (BJSM) and its publisher, BMJ, said in a statement and editorial on Monday that their trust in McCrory’s work was “broken”. They had verified allegation­s of plagiarism for five articles authored by the journal’s former editor. Three more articles contained “duplicate (or redundant) publicatio­n”.

In the ninth retracted article, “McCrory inaccurate­ly quotes and misreprese­nts the position of Dr Augustus Thorndike,” the BJSM editors said. “The quote distorts Thorndike’s recommenda­tions for managing ongoing participat­ion in contact sport after concussion, which McCrory used to support his stance in the article.”

The editors’ investigat­ions had “revealed a pattern of publicatio­n misconduct on the part of McCrory”, they said, which led to their decision to place a notice to readers, “an expression of concern” on all his sole-authored pieces.

“Plagiarism is scientific misconduct. To plagiarise while holding the position of editor-in-chief of a journal is an abuse of the power and responsibi­lities that come with this office. It undermines both science and the trust placed in editors to protect the integrity of the scientific record,” the editorial said.

“The scientific record relies on trust, and BMJ’s trust in McCrory’s work – specifical­ly the articles that he has published as a single author – is broken. We will investigat­e any new allegation­s that we receive about McCrory’s work published in BMJ journals. We ask other publishers and his institutio­n to do the same.”

The journal said it had given McCrory “the opportunit­y to inform us of any other of his articles that may fall short of acceptable publishing standards” but that he had provided no new informatio­n.

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Allegation­s of plagiarism were first aired in March against McCrory, which led to the BJSM’s retraction of one of his 2005 editorials, citing an “unlawful and indefensib­le breach of copyright” of the work of Prof Steve Haake.

McCrory, who is also an honorary associate with the prestigiou­s Florey Institute for medical research at the University of Melbourne, gave a statement at the time to Retraction Watch, his only public statements on the matter to date, saying his failure to attribute Haake’s work was an error and “not deliberate or intentiona­l”.

McCrory was the chair of the influentia­l Concussion in Sport Group (CISG) and the lead author of four of the group’s five highly influentia­l Consensus Statements on Concussion in Sport, all of which were published in the BJSM. These papers shaped concussion management protocols in profession­al and amateur sports globally, including multiple football codes, hockey, rugby union, and more.

The BJSM editorial noted that McCrory’s “involvemen­t in the concussion consensus statements is his most influentia­l work”. After reviewing “in detail” the most recent statement from 2016, “our conclusion is that we have no concerns about plagiarism”.

“Beyond this, the question of the extent of McCrory’s contributi­on to and influence on the five versions of the consensus statement is a matter within the purview of the scientific committee appointed by the CISG,” the editorial said.

McCrory stood down from the CISG in March, in the wake of the initial plagiarism allegation­s.

Separately, in March, Guardian Australia revealed that in May 2018 McCrory had provided an enforceabl­e undertakin­g to the Medical Board of Australia that he would not perform neurodiagn­ostic procedures.

Guardian Australia has attempted to contact McCrory numerous times regarding the plagiarism allegation­s, his clinical research, his treatment of concussed players, the enforceabl­e undertakin­gs to the medical board and related matters and received no response.

In April, in the wake of the allegation­s, the AFL announced an independen­t review led by Bernard Quinn KC into McCrory’s historical medical research, the circumstan­ces of the undertakin­g, and the concussion advice provided to the league by him, including “the circumstan­ces in which McCrory treated or assessed AFL or AFLW players or retired players”.

On Friday, the coroner presiding over the directions hearing for the inquest into the death of former Richmond player Shane Tuck, heard that the outcome of this review was “imminent”. Tuck took his own life in 2020 aged 38, and was later found to have had a severe case of chronic traumatic encephalop­athy, a neurodegen­erative disease associated with repeated head trauma and history of concussion.

In September, Guardian Australia reported that Nick Brown, a data analyst at Linnaeus University in Sweden, had found a further 10 instances of alleged plagiarism by McCrory, involving works published between 2001 and 2018, including the unattribut­ed incorporat­ion of a Washington Post journalist’s work into a book chapter about sports concussion recovery, and many instances in which he did not attribute his own previously published work. McCrory did not respond to requests for comment at the time.

The BJSM editorial notes that over his career, McCrory published “at least 164 articles in BMJ journals, of which 40 were co authored research articles”. It has placed concerns notices above the 38 articles that it says are single-authored; this count is disputed by website Retraction Watch, which counts 78 sole-authored articles by McCrory.

 ?? Photograph: Florey Institute ?? Allegation­s of plagiarism were first aired in March against concussion expert Paul McCrory.
Photograph: Florey Institute Allegation­s of plagiarism were first aired in March against concussion expert Paul McCrory.

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