Frontiers in Digital Health – Bias and Credibility

Frontiers in Digital Health - Pro Science - Non-Biased - Credible - Trustworthy

Factual Reporting: Mostly Factual - Mostly Credible and Reliable


PRO-SCIENCE

These sources consist of legitimate science or are evidence-based through credible scientific sourcing.  Legitimate science follows the scientific method, is unbiased, and does not use emotional words.  These sources also respect the consensus of experts in the given scientific field and strive to publish peer-reviewed science. Some sources in this category may have a slight political bias but adhere to scientific principles. See all Pro-Science sources.

  • Overall, we rate Frontiers in Digital Health as a Pro-Science journal based on peer review and a clean fact-check record. We also rate them Mostly Factual due to Frontier Media’s retractions of studies either pre or post-publication.

Detailed Report

Bias Rating: PRO-SCIENCE (-0.5)
Factual Reporting: MOSTLY FACTUAL (2.1)
Country: United Kingdom
MBFC’s Country Freedom Rating: MOSTLY FREE
Media Type: Journal
Traffic/Popularity: Minimal Traffic
MBFC Credibility Rating: HIGH CREDIBILITY

History

Frontiers in Digital Health is a peer-reviewed open-access journal that covers Digital Health. According to its About page, “Frontiers in Digital Health explores the ways in which innovative digital tools and technologies can transform modern healthcare.”

Read our profile on the UK’s media and government.

Funded by / Ownership

Frontiers in Digital Health is owned by Frontiers Media SA, which is a for-profit corporation. Funding comes from digital sales of content and author fees for publication.

Analysis / Bias

Frontiers in Digital Health is an open-access journal that publishes information and research related to Digital Health. The journal primarily publishes research like this: An Investigation of mHealth and Digital Health Literacy Among New Parents During COVID-19.



Frontiers Media has been criticized for being a predatory open-access publisher. In short, Predatory Open Access publishing is an exploitative open-access publishing business model that involves charging publication fees to authors without providing the editorial and publishing services associated with legitimate journals.

However, Frontiers in Digital Health is a credible scientific journal, as we have not found any controversy or significant retractions. However, Frontiers Media has retracted some studies in other publications that were found to be of poor methodology and not thoroughly peer-reviewed.

Failed Fact Checks

  • None in the Last 5 years

Overall, we rate Frontiers in Digital Health as a Pro-Science journal based on peer review and a clean fact-check record. We also rate them Mostly Factual due to Frontier Media’s retractions of studies either pre or post-publication. (D. Van Zandt 12/30/2023) Updated (11/07/2025)

Source: https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/digital-health

Last Updated on November 7, 2025 by Media Bias Fact Check


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