Anglia Ruskin Research Online (ARRO)
Browse

Fragile methods, fractured trust: rethinking scientific responsibility

Download (584.85 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2025-08-22, 15:28 authored by Stephen A Bustin, Carl T Wittwer
Science has a credibility problem, and it is not just the fault of politicians, journalists, or conspiracy theorists. It begins within science itself. This review examines how flawed methods and selective reporting, combined with overly polished communications that prioritise image over clarity, have normalised bad practice in molecular biology, diagnostics, and related applied sciences. The quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) offers a clear example: a conceptually simple, technically mature technology that is nonetheless routinely misused, despite published standards and repeated calls for methodological rigour over the past two decades. If qPCR is so often misapplied, what does that suggest about confidence in more complex, less transparent technologies? An additional problem lies in the way scientific findings are misreported or exaggerated. Such distortions have far-reaching consequences beyond individual studies. From the MMR-autism scare to COVID-19 testing and vaccine hesitancy, they have fuelled confusion, eroded public trust, and endangered public health. Consequently, when flawed or overstated findings shape public policy or clinical decisions, the damage undermines science's role as a reliable source of knowledge and informed choice. Credibility must rest on transparent practice, ethical responsibility, and attention to both how results are produced and how they are communicated. Until scientists recognise that communication is not value-neutral, and that our public voice carries consequences far beyond the lab, public scepticism will be justified.<p></p>

History

Related Materials

Item sub-type

Journal Article

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

242

Page range

54-61

Publication title

Methods

ISSN

1046-2023

Publisher

Elsevier BV

Location

United States

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Media of output

Print-Electronic

Affiliated with

  • Medical Technologies Research Centre (MTRC) Outputs

Usage metrics

    ARU Outputs

    Licence

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC