While I agree in principle that this could be useful, still I wonder -- researchers that spend months, years on some subject are apparently unable to double-check the shoulders they stand on -- would this really make a difference?
Now, if the respected journals would automatically reject any paper citing a refuted paper as support, that might bring about the needed cultural change...
From The Atlantic's Lies, Damned Lies and Medical Science:
Here's a suggested solution to the problem of refuted research still being cited. Have some respected agency maintain an archive of studies that have failed to replicate or that have otherwise been found lacking. Once such an archive existed, medical journals could adopt a policy of checking all citations in a proposed article against the archive, rejecting submissions that tried to cite refuted research as valid. This might also alleviate the problem of people not doing replications because replications don't get many cites. Once such an archive was established, getting your results there might become quite prestigious.
The one major problem that I can see with this proposal is that it's not always obvious when a study should be considered refuted. But even erring on the side of only including firmly refuted studies should be much better than nothing at all.
Such a fix seems obvious and simple to me, and while maintaining the archive and keeping it up to date would be expensive, it should be easily affordable for an organization such as a major university or the NIH. Similar archives could also be used for fields other than medicine. Is there some reason that I'm missing for why this isn't done?