https://www.selleckchem.com/products/bicuculline.html We conducted this scoping review of common errors identified by editors and reviewers of biomedical manuscripts. Errors includes items that a reviewer or editor might identify as needing correction. The errors were categorized by section of the manuscript Introduction, Methods, Results, Discussion, and References. After screening 87 published studies, 16 papers were selected for data extraction. Of these 16 studies, the most frequently represented disciplines were Medicine (n = 5), Radiology (n = 2), and Psychiatry (n = 2). The most reported common errors included inappropriate study design, inadequate sample size, poor statistical analysis, and unclear and inadequate description of methods. Abstracts not reflecting the content of the paper were the most frequent general common error in biomedical manuscripts. The findings of this study offer one perspective on common errors in biomedical manuscripts and might be a useful guide for novice authors. To evaluate utilization and mortality outcomes of interhospital transferred critically-ill medical patients with lower predicted risk of hospital mortality. Multisite retrospective cohort analysis of patients with Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) IV-a predicted mortality of ≤20% from 335 ICUs in 208 hospitals in the Philips eICU database between 2014-2015. Differences in length-of-stay (LOS) and mortality between transferred and local patients were evaluated using negative binomial logistic regression and logistic regression, respectively. Stratified analyses were conducted for subgroups of predicted mortality 0%-5%, 6%-10%, 11%-15%, and 16%-20%. Transfers had a higher risk of longer ICU and hospital LOS across all risk strata (IRR 1.12; 95% CI 1.09-1.16, < 0.001 and IRR 1.11; 95% CI 1.07-1.14, 0.001 respectively). Mortality was higher among transfers, largely driven by the 6%-10% mortality risk strata (OR 1.30; 95% CI 1.09-1.54, = 0.003). Interho