Systematic Reviews

SCOPUS (2002,2005-2010,2012-2023)SCIE-ISI

  2046-4053

 

 

Cơ quản chủ quản:  BioMed Central Ltd. , BMC

Lĩnh vực:
Medicine (miscellaneous)

Các bài báo tiêu biểu

Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta-analysis protocols (PRISMA-P) 2015 statement
Tập 4 Số 1 - 2015
David Moher, Larissa Shamseer, Mike Clarke, Davina Ghersi, Alessandro Liberati, Mark Petticrew, Paul G Shekelle, Lesley Stewart
Clarifying differences between review designs and methods
- 2012
David Gough, James Thomas, Sandy Oliver
Evaluation of the Cochrane Collaboration’s tool for assessing the risk of bias in randomized trials: focus groups, online survey, proposed recommendations and their implementation
- 2014
Jelena Savović, Laura Weeks, Jonathan A C Sterne, Lucy Turner, Douglas G. Altman, David Moher, Julian P T Higgins
Automating data extraction in systematic reviews: a systematic review
- 2015
Siddhartha Jonnalagadda, Pawan Goyal, Mark D. Huffman
Are systematic reviews up-to-date at the time of publication?
Tập 2 Số 1 - 2013
Elaine Beller, Kee Hsin Chen, Una Li Hsiang Wang, Paul Glasziou
Abstract Background

Systematic reviews provide a synthesis of evidence for practitioners, for clinical practice guideline developers, and for those designing and justifying primary research. Having an up-to-date and comprehensive review is therefore important. Our main objective was to determine the recency of systematic reviews at the time of their publication, as measured by the time from last search date to publication. We also wanted to study the time from search date to acceptance, and from acceptance to publication, and measure the proportion of systematic reviews with recorded information on search dates and information sources in the abstract and full text of the review.

Methods

A descriptive analysis of published systematic reviews indexed in Medline in 2009, 2010 and 2011 by three reviewers, independently extracting data.

Results

Of the 300 systematic reviews included, 271 (90%) provided the date of search in the full-text article, but only 141 (47%) stated this in the abstract. The median (standard error; minimum to maximum) survival time from last search to acceptance was 5.1 (0.58; 0 to 43.8) months (95% confidence interval = 3.9 to 6.2) and from last search to first publication time was 8.0 (0.35; 0 to 46.7) months (95% confidence interval = 7.3 to 8.7), respectively. Of the 300 reviews, 295 (98%) stated which databases had been searched, but only 181 (60%) stated the databases in the abstract. Most researchers searched three (35%) or four (21%) databases. The top-three most used databases were MEDLINE (79%), Cochrane library (76%), and EMBASE (64%).

Conclusions

Being able to identify comprehensive, up-to-date reviews is important to clinicians, guideline groups, and those designing clinical trials. This study demonstrates that some reviews have a considerable delay between search and publication, but only 47% of systematic review abstracts stated the last search date and 60% stated the databases that had been searched. Improvements in the quality of abstracts of systematic reviews and ways to shorten the review and revision processes to make review publication more rapid are needed.

Better duplicate detection for systematic reviewers: evaluation of Systematic Review Assistant-Deduplication Module
Tập 4 Số 1 - 2015
John Rathbone, Matt Carter, Tammy Hoffmann, Paul Glasziou
What guidance is available for researchers conducting overviews of reviews of healthcare interventions? A scoping review and qualitative metasummary
- 2016
Michelle Pollock, Ricardo M Fernandes, Lorne A Becker, Robin Featherstone, Lisa Hartling