A welcome change: new medical journal commits to values of Honest Medicine™

New medical journal plans to restore scientific integrity

A new medical journal, the “Journal of the FLCCC Alliance" will soon be published by an organization founded by Dr. Paul Marik, Dr. Pierre Kory, and others in March 2020 to provide the public with treatment protocols for COVID-19 and later long-COVID, and related vaccine injuries. Currently, the FLCCC Alliance offers strategies to prevent and treat various respiratory illnesses, as well as conditions such as cancer, insulin resistance, and sepsis. 

According to the FLCCC Alliance's press release, it will not accept Pharma or government agency funds. FLCCC President and Chief Medical Officer, and now Editor-in-Chief of the journal, Dr. Joseph Varon said they will appraise all papers submitted with “meticulous objectivity.”

The medical journal will publish crucial scientific research and insights from leading experts worldwide, and cover critical, often-under-reported topics of growing concern in the medical community.

. . . This new multispecialty medical journal will advance unbiased, high-quality medical knowledge and evidence-based resources. Notably, the Journal of the FLCCC Alliance will not accept funding from pharmaceutical companies or governmental agencies.

The FLCCC’s resolute commitment to the high-minded values of Honest Medicine™ will be reflected in every dimension of the journal’s development and publication . . . This means that we will receive, consider and review all papers, studies and editorials with meticulous objectivity . . .  

An answer to rampant publishing fraud

This is good news for those interested in research that can be relied upon. As Frontline News reported, many existing medical journals often publish fraudulent papers. 

The problem is so bad that Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the medical journal Lancet, stated, in an April 2015 article, "that perhaps half" of what's published in medical journals is simply not true.

The case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest . . . science has taken a turn towards darkness. . . .  scientists too often sculpt data to fit their preferred theory of the world. Or they retrofit hypotheses to fit their data. Journal editors . . . . love of “significance” pollutes the literature with many a statistical fairy-tale. We reject important confirmations. . . 

With the advent of AI, even more fraud is taking place. The science publisher Wiley just closed down 19 journals after it was discovered that 11,000 papers were AI “gobbledygook.”

Wiley science publisher has reportedly "peer reviewed" more than 11,000 papers that were determined to be fake without ever noticing. The papers were referred to as "naked gobbledygook sandwiches",  Australian blogger Jo Nova wrote on her blog last week.

Much of the problem, Frontline News explained, results from pharma funding academic research, dishonesty in clinical trials and reporting, FDA corruption, and pharmaceutical companies paying (off?) journal editors.

An answer to narrow scope of pharma-/government-funded research

The new journal will also be welcomed by researchers who cannot get published because their findings do not support pharmaceutical drugs and mainstream medicine's narrative, as became particularly apparent during COVID. The Alliance expects to receive contributions from authors in "multi-disciplinary specialties committed to researching often neglected emerging therapies — including repurposed drugs, alternative therapies, and the scientifically proven impact of certain vaccines.” In particular, the press release highlights the journal's focus on the following key areas:

  • State-of-the-art diagnosis and treatment
  • Use of repurposed drugs
  • Alternative therapies
  • Practice patterns and methodology
  • Medical ethics and healthcare policy

X user SJKR sums up the feelings of others who commented, on FLCCC's news of their new journal, that it is sorely needed since scientific trust and integrity are lacking. 
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The journal will supplement sites, such as Greenmedinfo, which currently publicize natural health information, including research findings on vitamins, minerals, herbs, and foods, 

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