| Literature DB >> 26506244 |
Simon Lewin1, Claire Glenton2, Heather Munthe-Kaas3, Benedicte Carlsen4, Christopher J Colvin5, Metin Gülmezoglu6, Jane Noyes7, Andrew Booth8, Ruth Garside9, Arash Rashidian10.
Abstract
Simon Lewin and colleagues present a methodology for increasing transparency and confidence in qualitative research synthesis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26506244 PMCID: PMC4624425 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001895
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Components of the CERQual approach.
| Component | Definition |
|---|---|
| Methodological limitations | The extent to which there are problems in the design or conduct of the primary studies that contributed evidence to a review finding |
| Relevance | The extent to which the body of evidence from the primary studies supporting a review finding is applicable to the context (perspective or population, phenomenon of interest, setting) specified in the review question |
| Coherence | The extent to which the review finding is well grounded in data from the contributing primary studies and provides a convincing explanation for the patterns found in these data |
| Adequacy of data | An overall determination of the degree of richness and quantity of data supporting a review finding |
Example of a CERQual Qualitative Evidence Profile* .
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| While regular salaries were not part of many programmes, other monetary and nonmonetary incentives, including payment to cover out-of-pocket expenses and “work tools” such as bicycles, uniforms, or identity badges, were greatly appreciated by lay health workers. | Studies 2; 5; 11; 12; 22; 29 | Minor methodological limitations (five studies with minor and one study with moderate methodological limitations) | Minor concerns about relevance (studies of lay health worker programmes from five countries and three continents: United States, Uganda, Nepal, Kenya, and India) | Minor concerns about coherence (data reasonably consistent within and across all studies) | Minor concerns about adequacy (six studies that together offered moderately rich data overall) |
| This finding was graded as moderate confidence because of minor concerns regarding methodological limitations, relevance, coherence, and adequacy. |
| Some unsalaried lay health workers expressed a strong wish for regular payment. | Studies 5; 13 | Minor methodological limitations (both studies had minor methodological limitations) | Moderate concerns about relevance (partial relevance, as the studies were from only two settings, both of which were in Africa) | Minor concerns about coherence (data consistent within and across both studies) | Substantial concerns about adequacy (only two studies, both offering thin data) |
| This finding was graded as low confidence because of moderate concerns regarding relevance and substantial concerns regarding adequacy of data. |
* Findings were taken from [9] and adapted to fit the context of this article.
# The synthesis findings presented here are drawn from the wider thematic synthesis undertaken for this review. The themes identified were summarised into evidence statements, as illustrated in this table. The methods are described in more detail in [9].
The CERQual approach—Definitions of levels of confidence in a review finding.
| Level | Definition |
|---|---|
| High confidence | It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest |
| Moderate confidence | It is likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest |
| Low confidence | It is possible that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest |
| Very low confidence | It is not clear whether the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest. |
Example of a CERQual Summary of Qualitative Findings table* .
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| While regular salaries were not part of many programmes, other monetary and nonmonetary incentives, including payment to cover out-of-pocket expenses and “work tools” such as bicycles, uniforms, or identity badges, were greatly appreciated by lay health workers. | Moderate | This finding was graded as moderate confidence because of minor concerns regarding methodological limitations, relevance, coherence, and adequacy. | Studies 2; 5; 11; 12; 22; 29 |
| Some unsalaried lay health workers expressed a strong wish for regular payment. | Low | This finding was graded as low confidence because of moderate concerns regarding relevance and substantial concerns regarding adequacy of data. | Studies 5; 13 |
*Findings were taken from [9] and adapted to fit the context of this article.
# The synthesis findings presented here are drawn from the wider thematic synthesis undertaken for this review. The themes identified were summarised into evidence statements, as illustrated in this table. The methods are described in more detail in [9], and the CERQual assessments for each component are shown in Table 2.