Journal: Frontiers in Public Health Publisher: Frontiers Media S.A. ISSN: 2296-2565 Open Access: Yes (Gold OA, author-pays model) Impact Factor (2025): ~4.5 Scope: Multidisciplinary journal covering all aspects of public health, including epidemiology, health policy, global health, occupational health, and digital health.
- The journal publishes hundreds of articles per month, which raises serious concerns about editorial selectivity. - The review process is often accelerated and editor-driven, with an emphasis on “collaborative” review that may discourage rejection and encourage compromise.
- A large portion of articles serve more as policy cheerleading than critical analysis — praising reforms, digital tools, or systems with little concern for unintended consequences or confounders. - Quantitative noise is common: statistical methods are used to dress up simplistic or tautological claims.
- Many papers use high-volume administrative data to draw shallow conclusions (e.g., “costs decreased” or “efficiency improved”) without exploring mechanisms, clinical nuance, or ethical trade-offs. - Qualitative understanding — the kind that actually informs patient care or structural reform — is often missing.
- As with all Frontiers journals, authors pay article processing charges (APCs) to publish. - This model may create perverse incentives for editorial teams to accept more articles to sustain revenue. - Guest-edited Research Topics are often populated by contributor networks, not necessarily by independent or critical peers.
Aspect | Assessment |
——————————- | —————————————————————— |
Scientific Rigor | Variable; many papers lack mechanistic depth |
Peer Review Quality | Rapid, often superficial, author-friendly |
Editorial Selectivity | Low; high acceptance rate and article volume |
Use of Statistics | Often decorative, lacking causal validation |
Role in Academia | Growing in volume, declining in prestige |
Best Use Case | Preliminary studies, policy opinions, or data visualizations |
Risk | Dilutes scientific discourse by blurring the line between science and advocacy |
*Frontiers in Public Health* embodies the paradox of modern open-access publishing: accessible but inflated, fast but shallow, prolific but uncritical. While it serves as a platform for public health communication and visibility, it often falls short of scientific rigor, critical depth, and editorial integrity.
Researchers — especially clinicians and decision-makers — should approach its content with discerning skepticism.