PLOS Medicine
PLOS Medicine is a peer-reviewed, open-access academic journal published monthly by the Public Library of Science (PLOS), focusing on original research and analyses in medicine with an emphasis on biomedical, environmental, social, and political determinants of health.[1] Launched in October 2004, the journal prioritizes articles of outstanding medical importance that address global health challenges, including translational research and policy-relevant findings, to advance clinical understanding and healthcare delivery.[2][1] The journal's open-access model ensures that all content is freely available immediately upon publication, supporting PLOS's broader mission to accelerate scientific progress by removing barriers to knowledge dissemination.[3] It publishes a range of article types, including research articles, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and editorials, with rigorous peer review emphasizing relevance to clinicians, policymakers, and researchers worldwide.[4][5] Notable for its high citation impact, PLOS Medicine has influenced public health discussions through publications on topics like disease burdens, intervention efficacy, and health inequities, though its academic institutional origins warrant scrutiny for potential biases in topic selection favoring certain global health narratives.[6][7] While celebrated for democratizing access to high-quality medical literature, the journal operates within an open-access ecosystem that relies on article processing charges, raising questions about sustainability and equity in publishing, particularly for researchers from low-resource settings.[8] Its editorial policies have evolved to align more closely with pressing world health priorities, as restated in 2009, underscoring a commitment to impactful science over volume.[9]History
Founding of PLOS and Origins
The Public Library of Science (PLOS) originated from an open letter circulated in 2000 by biomedical researchers Harold Varmus, Patrick O. Brown, and Michael B. Eisen, which called for the scientific community to create a public library offering free, searchable access to the full published record of research in medicine and the life sciences.[10] The letter argued that restricting access to publicly funded research hindered scientific progress and knowledge integration, pledging signatories to boycott journals that did not deposit articles in public archives like PubMed Central within six months of publication starting September 2001.[10] It ultimately garnered signatures from over 34,000 scientists across 180 countries, highlighting widespread frustration with subscription-based publishing models that prioritized profits over dissemination.[10] When publishers failed to respond adequately to the petition, the founders established PLOS as a nonprofit organization in 2001 to operationalize open access publishing, initially raising funds through advocacy and grants to launch peer-reviewed journals under a Creative Commons license that allowed free reuse with attribution.[11] PLOS's inaugural journal, PLOS Biology, debuted in October 2003, demonstrating viability by attracting high-impact submissions without reader fees, funded instead by article processing charges paid by authors or institutions.[12] Building on this model, PLOS Medicine was launched in October 2004 as the organization's second journal, specifically targeting medicine to counter the paywalls of established titles like The New England Journal of Medicine and The Lancet, with an emphasis on rigorous peer review of clinically relevant research while ensuring immediate global availability.[12][13] The journal's origins reflected PLOS's broader critique of access barriers in biomedicine, where delayed or restricted dissemination could impede public health responses, and it quickly positioned itself as a venue for original research, policy analysis, and debates on evidence-based medicine.[14]Launch and Early Years (2004–2010)
PLOS Medicine launched its inaugural issue on October 19, 2004, as the second open-access journal from the Public Library of Science, building on the success of PLOS Biology introduced the previous year.[15] The journal adopted a fully open-access model financed through article processing charges paid by authors or their institutions, aiming to make high-quality medical research freely available without subscription barriers.[16] Virginia Barbour served as one of the three founding editors, guiding the initial editorial direction alongside a board drawn from global medical expertise.[17] The launch editorial, "Prescription for a Healthy Journal," articulated the journal's scope: publishing original research, systematic reviews, and policy analyses with direct relevance to patient care, public health, and clinical practice, while emphasizing underrepresented global health priorities such as diseases in low- and middle-income countries.[18] Content categories included peer-reviewed research articles, editorials, perspectives, and policy forums to foster debate on medical evidence and its societal implications. Early issues prioritized rigorous peer review, with an initial acceptance rate reflecting selectivity comparable to established journals like The Lancet or New England Journal of Medicine.[19] Reception in 2004 was generally favorable within scientific and publishing communities, praised for advancing open access amid criticisms of traditional paywalled models that limited dissemination of taxpayer-funded research.[19] Commentators highlighted the inaugural issue's diverse, high-caliber content as evidence of PLOS Medicine's potential to compete with legacy titles, though skeptics questioned the long-term viability of the author-fee structure without ongoing subsidies.[20] A landmark early publication was John P. A. Ioannidis's August 2005 article "Why Most Published Research Findings Are False," which critiqued statistical power and bias in biomedical research, amassing thousands of citations and influencing discussions on research reproducibility.[21] From 2005 to 2010, the journal expanded its output, issuing monthly volumes while maintaining open access under Creative Commons licenses, and critiqued metrics like the impact factor for distorting publishing incentives, as noted in a 2006 editorial arguing for alternative assessments of scientific quality.[22] Submission volumes grew, reflecting increasing author trust in the model, though editorial policies emphasized transparency in conflicts of interest and data sharing to counter biases in medical literature. By 2010, PLOS Medicine had solidified its role in the open-access landscape, contributing to broader shifts in scholarly communication despite ongoing debates over funding sustainability.[23]Evolution and Recent Developments (2011–Present)
Following its early years, PLOS Medicine intensified efforts to elevate reporting standards in medical research, issuing editorials in 2011 advocating for protocols and registration in systematic reviews to enhance transparency and reduce bias.[24] The journal also critiqued industry influences on authorship guidelines that year, highlighting how uniform criteria like ICMJE could be manipulated to obscure contributions.[25] These initiatives aligned with broader PLOS goals to foster rigorous, reproducible science amid growing concerns over publication practices.[26] In 2014, commemorating its tenth anniversary, PLOS Medicine's editors underscored two key imperatives: achieving universal access to high-quality medical literature and ensuring its equitable production, acknowledging that open access had progressed but faced ongoing systemic hurdles in traditional publishing models.[27] The journal's impact factor peaked at 14.429 that year, reflecting strong citation influence in general medicine.[28] By 2017, amid global health shifts, the editorial board was renewed with updated priorities emphasizing conflict-affected regions, migration, and climate impacts on health, aiming to guide research toward pressing policy needs.[29] Through the late 2010s and early 2020s, PLOS Medicine sustained high selectivity, with impact factors hovering around 11 (e.g., 11.675 in 2017, 10.500 in 2019, 11.069 in 2020), before declining to 8.71 by 2024, amid broader trends in citation metrics across open-access journals.[28] In September 2025, PLOS updated its editorial policy for retrospective health database research to clarify ethical requirements for publicly accessible data, reinforcing reproducibility standards.[30] Concurrently, the journal articulated a forward-looking vision prioritizing evidence generation for real-world impact and equity in global health research.[31] These developments underscore PLOS Medicine's adaptation to evolving scientific demands while upholding its foundational open-access ethos.Aims and Scope
Core Mission and Objectives
PLOS Medicine operates as a peer-reviewed, open-access journal dedicated to publishing research and commentary addressing major global health challenges, with a focus on the biomedical, environmental, social, and political determinants of health.[1] As part of the Public Library of Science (PLOS), a non-profit organization, the journal aligns with the broader mission to accelerate open science by removing barriers to knowledge dissemination, promoting inclusion, and enabling the reuse of scientific outputs to transform research publishing, policy, and practice.[32] Its objectives emphasize advancing clinical practice, health policy, or pathophysiological understanding through work that holds potential to benefit health outcomes across diverse global settings, including high-priority topics such as conditions and risk factors responsible for substantial losses in healthy life years worldwide.[1] The journal's editorial vision prioritizes rigorous, relevant, and equitable research capable of driving meaningful change in global health, reflecting principles of diversity, openness, and actionable science.[33] Core objectives include promoting translational medicine by highlighting novel mechanistic insights into disease processes and ensuring publications have direct implications for patient care, public policy, or clinical research agendas.[1] To achieve this, PLOS Medicine maintains high selectivity, publishing approximately 10% of submissions after initial screening, with only about 20% of those invited for full review proceeding to research articles, thereby focusing on substantial advances with broad international relevance.[1] Central to its priorities are three pillars: evidence, impact, and equity. Evidence entails high-quality, policy-relevant research that addresses major disease burdens and expands into underrepresented areas, such as women's health, mental health, and climate-health intersections, while emphasizing actionable interventions and health policy analysis.[33] Impact seeks real-world transformations in policy, clinical practice, and community outcomes, supported through formats like Policy Forums and Health in Action that underscore practical applications.[33] Equity involves fostering inclusion by diversifying editorial teams, authors, and reviewers; supporting research from underrepresented regions and disciplines; and combating practices like parachute science, alongside enhancing transparency in clinical trial reporting and preprint integration to reflect global communities' needs.[33]Published Content Types
PLOS Medicine publishes a range of content focused on advancing medical knowledge with implications for clinical practice, public policy, or pathophysiological understanding. The journal's primary content type consists of original research articles reporting findings of outstanding medical importance, including clinical trials, epidemiological studies, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and qualitative investigations into biomedical, environmental, social, or political determinants of health.[4][1] These articles must demonstrate substantial advances, such as novel mechanistic insights or evidence influencing patient care, and are structured with sections including an abstract (divided into Background, Methods and Findings, and Conclusions), Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, and references, emphasizing reproducibility and data availability.[4] Complementing research articles, PLOS Medicine features several non-research formats to provide context, commentary, and guidance:- Perspectives: Expert analyses discussing the clinical or public health implications of recent studies, typically up to 1,000 words with a maximum of 12 references and one optional display item; often commissioned but unsolicited submissions are considered, avoiding self-promotion of authors' own work.[34][1]
- Policy Forums: Articles by policymakers or experts addressing health policy challenges and opportunities, limited to 2,000 words and up to 30 references, encouraged to include display items and cover background, evidence, proposals, and implementation barriers.[34]
- Guidelines and Guidance: Recommendations on research conduct, reporting standards, or emerging methodologies, capped at 3,000 words with up to 30 references; requires detailing consensus processes, panel selection, and limitations, with longer versions potentially summarized and supplemented by full supporting information.[34]
- Editorials: Short pieces commissioned or written by the editorial team, published monthly to highlight topics of medical or policy interest.[34][1]
- Collection Overviews: Contextual essays for pre-planned themed collections, providing historical and scientific framing for included articles; typically commissioned and concise with appropriate referencing.[34]
Scope in Medical Research
PLOS Medicine encompasses a broad scope in medical research, emphasizing original articles and analyses that address major global health challenges with potential to advance clinical practice, inform health policy, or deepen pathophysiological understanding. The journal prioritizes studies on biomedical, environmental, social, and political determinants of health, particularly those tackling conditions responsible for substantial global health burdens, such as infectious diseases, non-communicable diseases, and inequities in health outcomes.[1] This focus extends to translational medicine, research integrity, and ethical considerations in health research, ensuring publications contribute meaningfully to evidence-based decision-making for clinicians, policymakers, and researchers.[1] Original research submissions must demonstrate outstanding medical importance, featuring substantial advances in knowledge that inspire further investigation, enhance patient care, or improve public health strategies. Manuscripts are evaluated for their ability to pose and resolve critical research questions with rigorous methodology, often incorporating human data or justified translational models for issues untestable in humans. The journal favors policy-relevant work across diverse settings, including global health disparities and social determinants, while discouraging non-prospectively registered clinical trials absent compelling justifications.[4] Approximately 10% of initial submissions advance to full peer review, reflecting stringent criteria for novelty, impact, and generalizability beyond narrow specialties.[1] In addition to primary research like clinical trials and systematic reviews, the scope includes shorter reports of novel findings and interdisciplinary perspectives that bridge basic science with real-world applications, such as implementation science or health systems research. Publications must employ accessible language, eschewing excessive jargon to reach non-specialist audiences, thereby amplifying influence on clinical agendas and policy formulation. This comprehensive approach underscores PLOS Medicine's commitment to high-impact, open-access dissemination of evidence that counters fragmented or siloed medical inquiry.[4][1]Editorial Policies and Processes
Peer Review Mechanism
PLOS Medicine employs a single-anonymized peer review process by default, in which reviewers' identities are concealed from authors while authors' names are visible to reviewers.[5] Reviewers may opt to sign their reviews, making their names visible to authors and potentially published alongside the article if the authors choose to release the peer review history.[5] This approach balances anonymity with opportunities for transparency, allowing reviewers to claim credit for their contributions.[35] Submissions undergo an initial editorial assessment by a staff editor and an academic editor, who evaluate suitability for the journal's scope, including originality, methodological soundness, and potential impact on clinical practice or public health policy.[5] Manuscripts deemed promising proceed to full peer review, typically involving 2 to 3 external experts selected for their expertise in the relevant field; statistical expertise is sought when applicable.[36] [5] Reviewers are expected to assess validity (e.g., reproducibility of methods, adherence to reporting guidelines like CONSORT or STROBE), significance (e.g., implications for patient care or policy), and overall quality, providing constructive feedback within approximately 8 to 10 days.[35] [5] Academic editors synthesize reviewer comments to recommend decisions: reject, major revision, minor revision, or accept.[5] Major revisions often return to the original reviewers or new ones for re-evaluation, ensuring rigorous scrutiny.[5] Confidentiality is maintained throughout, with reviewers prohibited from sharing manuscripts without editorial permission.[35] Authors may opt to publish the peer review history—including decision letters and anonymized reviews—upon acceptance, promoting accountability; as of 2024, PLOS journals have published over 30,000 such histories across their portfolio.[5] [37] Appeals are permitted only for substantive factual errors or undisclosed conflicts of interest.[5] This mechanism emphasizes scientific merit over novelty alone, aligning with PLOS Medicine's mission to advance evidence-based medicine.[35]Ethical Guidelines and Conflicts of Interest
PLOS Medicine adheres to the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) Code of Conduct and Best Practice Guidelines for all publication ethics matters, including authorship, dual submission, plagiarism, and research integrity.[38] Authors are required to comply with these standards, and the journal investigates allegations of ethical breaches, such as data fabrication or failure to obtain ethics approvals, potentially leading to corrections, expressions of concern, or retractions as per COPE procedures.[38] Conflicts of interest (COI) disclosures are mandatory for authors, reviewers, and editors to ensure transparency and mitigate potential biases in the publication process. Authors must declare any financial, personal, or professional relationships that could influence—or be perceived to influence—their work, including funding sources, employment affiliations, or intellectual property interests; these are submitted via the manuscript system and published with the article, or a statement of "no competing interests" is included if none exist.[4] PLOS Medicine editors evaluate disclosed COI and may reject manuscripts if they determine that undeclared or significant interests have compromised the research's validity or objectivity, as outlined in early policy statements emphasizing rigorous scrutiny over mere disclosure.[39] For peer reviewers, a competing interest encompasses any factor—such as recent co-authorship (within five years), shared institutional affiliations, personal rivalries, or financial stakes—that could reasonably impair impartial assessment; reviewers must disclose these upon invitation and recuse themselves if the conflict is deemed substantial by the editor, who may still permit review with full transparency in exceptional cases.[40] Editors similarly declare COI and abstain from handling submissions involving close collaborators or funding conflicts, adhering to PLOS-wide policies that prioritize unbiased decision-making.[38] Beyond COI, ethical guidelines mandate institutional review board (IRB) or equivalent approval for all human and animal research, with details named in the methods section; human studies require informed consent (written preferred, with justification for oral), adherence to the Declaration of Helsinki, and de-identification of participant data unless explicit consent for publication is obtained.[4] Animal research follows national or international welfare standards, including the ARRIVE guidelines for reporting, with specifics on non-human primate studies scrutinized for ethical compliance. Authorship is restricted to contributors meeting CRediT criteria (e.g., conceptualization plus drafting), prohibiting ghost or guest authorship, while plagiarism is detected via Crossref Similarity Check and handled per COPE protocols.[4][38] These policies, informed by the journal's Advisory Group on Publication Ethics established around 2005, aim to uphold research integrity without compromising open-access dissemination.[41]Data and Reproducibility Standards
PLOS Medicine requires authors to include a Data Availability Statement in their submissions, ensuring that all data necessary to replicate the study's findings are made publicly available without restriction at the time of publication. This policy, effective across PLOS journals since March 3, 2014, mandates deposition of the minimal data set—such as raw data underlying means, graphs, and sample images—in public repositories like Dryad or domain-specific archives, preferably with DOIs or accession numbers.[42] Alternatively, data under 20 MB may be included in Supporting Information files hosted on figshare. Exceptions are permitted only for legal or ethical restrictions, such as protecting human participant confidentiality, in which case authors must provide a contact for access or a clear explanation of limitations; designating the sole author as the contact point or withholding data for proprietary reasons without public validation options is unacceptable.[42] These data sharing requirements directly support reproducibility by enabling independent validation, reanalysis, and replication of results, addressing common barriers in medical research where incomplete data availability hinders verification.[42] For third-party data, authors must share analysis-specific subsets or provide access instructions, further promoting transparency. PLOS Medicine editors and reviewers assess compliance, with potential retraction for unreasonable restrictions post-publication.[42] In addition to data, the journal mandates sharing of physical materials (e.g., plasmids, cell lines, antibodies) essential to the research, available without undue restriction upon publication, with encouraged deposition in repositories like Addgene and use of Research Resource Identifiers (RRIDs) for traceability.[43] Software and author-generated code central to analyses must be open source, deposited in public archives with DOIs, accompanied by documentation, test datasets, and licenses permitting reuse, ensuring reproducibility on standard platforms like MATLAB.[43] Details on access are integrated into the Data Availability Statement, and violations of these sharing commitments may lead to retraction.[43] To facilitate methodological reproducibility, PLOS Medicine expects manuscripts to describe statistical methods and other procedures in sufficient detail for exact replication by others, including software versions, parameters, and assumptions used.[44] This aligns with broader PLOS emphasis on transparent reporting to underpin credible, verifiable findings in medical studies.[45]Publishing Model
Open Access Principles
PLOS Medicine operates under a full open access publishing model, making all peer-reviewed articles immediately and permanently available online to readers worldwide without subscription fees or access barriers. This ensures that high-impact medical research is freely accessible to scientists, clinicians, policymakers, and the public, thereby accelerating knowledge dissemination and application in addressing global health challenges.[1][46] Articles are published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license, which grants users permission to read, download, copy, distribute, print, search, or link to the full texts, as well as to create derivative works for any purpose, including commercial uses, provided proper attribution is given to the original authors and source. Authors retain copyright ownership but grant PLOS a perpetual, worldwide license to publish and distribute the work openly, while third-party materials incorporated into articles must be compatible with CC BY or obtain explicit permissions. This licensing framework promotes maximal reuse and impact of research outputs while upholding ethical standards for attribution and rights clearance.[47][48] These principles trace back to the Public Library of Science's founding 2001 open letter, signed by over 34,000 scientists, which demanded free and unrestricted online access to the peer-reviewed literature in medicine and the life sciences to foster scientific progress and public benefit. The initiative emphasized that the archival record of research belongs to the public rather than for-profit publishers and called for support of journals enabling free distribution through public archives like PubMed Central within six months of publication. PLOS Medicine upholds this commitment by rejecting restrictive licenses such as CC BY-NC or CC BY-ND, prioritizing transparency and broad utility over proprietary controls.[10][47]Article Processing Charges and Funding
PLOS Medicine funds its open access operations primarily through article processing charges (APCs), which authors pay upon acceptance to offset expenses including peer review coordination, editorial management, production, digital hosting, and long-term archiving.[49] The current APC for PLOS Medicine stands at $6,460 USD for manuscripts from non-participating institutions.[49] This author-pays model, pioneered by PLOS since its founding, ensures immediate and unrestricted access to published content without subscription barriers, aligning with the organization's nonprofit mission to democratize scientific knowledge.[49] [50] To address equity concerns, PLOS Medicine implements a tiered waiver policy integrated with the Research4Life program, providing full APC waivers for corresponding authors affiliated with institutions in Group A low-income countries and free publication for those in Group B lower-middle-income countries specifically for this journal.[49] Authors ineligible for these waivers but facing financial hardship can apply for partial support through the PLOS Publication Fee Assistance (PFA) program, which evaluates need based on funding availability and is requested during submission; approval rates and coverage levels vary by demonstrated circumstances.[49] Institutional read-and-publish agreements further mitigate APC burdens for affiliated researchers, enabling unlimited APC-free publishing in PLOS Medicine and other journals for corresponding authors from participating organizations, such as universities covering costs via prepaid memberships under the Community Action Publishing framework.[49] These partnerships, which have expanded since 2021, redistribute financial responsibility from individual authors to institutions committed to open access, with examples including agreements at Duke University (effective 2023) and Yale University (effective 2021) that eliminate fees for eligible submissions.[49] [51] [52] Beyond APCs, PLOS sustains PLOS Medicine through diversified nonprofit funding, including philanthropic grants like the $3.3 million award from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation in December 2024 to facilitate a transition toward APC-alternative models, such as collective funding and reduced reliance on per-article fees.[53] This supports ongoing innovations in equitable publishing while maintaining rigorous standards, though critics have noted past APC increases—such as the 2021 proposal to raise PLOS Medicine's fee toward $6,300—as potential barriers for unfunded researchers despite waiver provisions.[54]Innovations and Sustainability Efforts
PLOS Medicine has advanced open access publishing in the medical field by providing immediate, unrestricted online availability of all content since its inception in 2005, enabling global distribution without subscription barriers.[12] The journal emphasizes policy-relevant research with implications for patient care and public health, incorporating formats like Policy Forum and Health in Action to highlight actionable insights and real-world applications.[31] Recent priorities include expanding coverage to underrepresented topics such as women's health, mental health, and climate-health intersections, alongside promoting preprint sharing and open science practices to accelerate knowledge dissemination in health sciences.[31] As part of broader PLOS initiatives, PLOS Medicine contributes to innovations in scholarly communication through the development of a "knowledge stack" that integrates non-article outputs like data and code, enhancing their visibility, discoverability, and reusability via repositories and indexing services.[55] This 18-month project, supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, aims to create an equitable publishing ecosystem beyond traditional articles.[55] To sustain its open access model, PLOS Medicine relies on PLOS-wide efforts to diversify revenue and reduce dependence on article processing charges (APCs), including alternative models like flat fees and global equity pricing introduced since 2020, which have secured partnerships with 181 institutions across 26 countries by 2022.[56] These include large consortia agreements such as Bibsam in Sweden, CSAL in Switzerland, and IReL in Ireland, eliminating APC burdens for affiliated authors and promoting financial inclusivity.[56] PLOS's signatory status to the UN Sustainable Development Goals Publisher’s Compact underscores commitments to equity, with initiatives removing financial barriers, fostering diversity in editorial roles, and guiding sustainability via an internal SDG Steering Committee.[57] For PLOS Medicine specifically, sustainability involves upholding transparent ethical standards while prioritizing equitable global collaborations to counter practices like parachute science.[31]Indexing, Metrics, and Influence
Abstracting and Indexing Services
PLOS Medicine is indexed in a range of major abstracting and indexing services, which facilitate discoverability, citation tracking, and integration into scholarly workflows. These services include PubMed and PubMed Central, maintained by the National Library of Medicine, providing comprehensive coverage of biomedical literature; Scopus, Elsevier's abstract and citation database; and Web of Science, Clarivate's platform for multidisciplinary indexing and analytics.[1][13] The journal's inclusion in these databases, which began upon its launch in September 2004, supports its role in disseminating high-impact medical research globally.[1][12] As an open-access publication, PLOS Medicine is also listed in the Directory of Open Access Journals (DOAJ), Crossref for DOI resolution and metadata, Dimensions for research analytics, and Google Scholar for broad web-based indexing.[1] This multi-service coverage ensures articles are retrievable across academic, clinical, and policy contexts, with PubMed's selective inclusion reflecting the journal's adherence to rigorous criteria for biomedical relevance and quality.[13] Indexing in Scopus and Web of Science further enables bibliometric assessments, such as journal impact factors, calculated annually based on citation data from citable articles published in the prior two years.[58]| Service | Provider | Key Features for PLOS Medicine Articles |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed / PubMed Central | National Library of Medicine | Biomedical abstracting; full-text archiving; essential for clinical and research searches.[1][13] |
| Scopus | Elsevier | Citation analysis; covers peer-reviewed literature across sciences.[1] |
| Web of Science | Clarivate | Impact factor calculation; multidisciplinary indexing with historical depth.[1] |
| DOAJ | Independent consortium | Open-access verification; promotes discoverability of fee-free content.[1][59] |
| Crossref | Crossref | DOI metadata; cross-publisher linking and reference resolution.[1] |