| Literature DB >> 28212677 |
Lisa Hartling1, Jeanne-Marie Guise2, Susanne Hempel3, Robin Featherstone4, Matthew D Mitchell5, Makalapua L Motu'apuaka2, Karen A Robinson6, Karen Schoelles7, Annette Totten8, Evelyn Whitlock9,10, Timothy J Wilt11, Johanna Anderson2, Elise Berliner12, Aysegul Gozu12, Elisabeth Kato12, Robin Paynter2, Craig A Umscheid13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing demand for rapid reviews and timely evidence synthesis. The goal of this project was to understand end-user perspectives on the utility and limitations of rapid products including evidence inventories, rapid responses, and rapid reviews.Entities:
Keywords: Decision-makers; End-users; Interviews; Knowledge synthesis; Rapid reviews; Systematic reviews
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28212677 PMCID: PMC5316162 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-017-0425-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Taxonomy of rapid products. This taxonomy provides general descriptions of rapid products based on a previous analysis of 36 different rapid products from 20 organizations worldwide [5]. We recognize that there may be some overlap in individual products
Key informant interviews: important characteristics of reviews
| Element | Theme | Sample quotes [type of end-user] |
|---|---|---|
| Methods | Important that sound methods are used in developing review | “..adherence to good standards of evidence evaluation is really critical, so that probably matters more to me than anything” [provider] |
| Source | Trust review products from reliable sources | “If it came from a place that we trust then we would have more confidence in using it than if it was just arbitrarily out there from somebody who had done it once.” [guideline developer] |
| Relationship between producer/user | Important to establish relationship with user up front | “… the quality that we've had in the reviews when they have that connection up front is significantly different…I think it also helps build trust in how the evidence is being done.” [guideline developer] |
| Clinical significance | Reviews should include considerations of clinical importance, not just statistical significance | “…ultimately, the clinical aspect is important. There is sometimes a gap between the statistical significance versus what’s clinically significant…” [guideline developer] |
| Recency | Important that a report is recent. A gap search is sometimes done | ‘We’re usually hoping we find something within the last two to three years” [guideline developer] |
| Key questions | The framing of the question can be the most important aspect of a review | “…the thing that I find most helpful in this approach to evidence always is the framing of the question” [provider] |
Key informant interviews: perspectives on review methods
| Element | Theme | Sample quotes [type of end-user] |
|---|---|---|
| Literature search |
| “I’d probably be more comfortable with selecting top 20 [journals]…and just do the evidence review using those.” [guideline developer] |
| Abstract/full-text screening |
| “To me that [single review] would be acceptable.” [research funder] |
| Quality assessment | Some assessment of literature quality is necessary | “I think that [quality assessment] should be included.” [payer] |
| Data tables/extraction | Evidence tables are useful | “I think the most important part of an evidence review is always going to be the evidence tables” [guideline developer] |
| Quality/strength of evidence | Quality/strength of evidence is important | “That [strength of evidence grading] would be very important.” [payer] |
| Summary tables | Summary tables or ways to present the results/conclusions in an accessible format are useful | “A lot of times you’ll do good summary tables, and that’s probably where I would look…” [payer] |
| Future research recommendations | Future research recommendations are helpful for research development | “…what are the future research recommendations…99.9% of the systematic reviews all concluded more research is needed, so focus on exactly what are they recommending.” [research funder] |
Comments that are italicized represent most acceptable trade-offs
Key informant interviews: uses of rapid products and standard systematic reviews
| Use | Evidence inventory | Rapid response | Rapid review | Systematic review |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| For broad topic areas/population issues | X | |||
| To inform research agenda | X | |||
| For in-depth understanding of a topic area | X | |||
| For guideline or recommendation development | X | X | ||
| For guideline/recommendation updates or new issues subsequent to a guideline/recommendation | X | X | ||
| For coverage decisions | X | X | ||
| For organizational or policy change | X | X | ||
| For implementation | X | X | ||
| For quick decisions | X | |||
| When no previous SR or guidance exists | X | |||
| For “hot” or timely topics | X | X | ||
| In area with limited literature | X | X | ||
| To understand depth and/or breadth of evidence e.g., evidence maps | X | X | ||
| To clarify whether a review is already available | X | X | ||
| To ignite/catalyze change or challenge the status quo | X | X |
Key informant interviews: themes about review products
| Category (features of the producer, report, or decision) | Theme | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Producer | Trust | • This was the primary issue that arose in the context of how end-users valued a review, and whether they would rely on a rapid product |
| Producer | Close working relationship | • Maintaining a close working relationship between the end-user and the review producer was considered important to ensure that the key questions reflected the end-user’s needs |
| Report | Relevance of the key questions | • Key informants stressed this, noting that if questions did not directly address the specific end-users’ needs, the review was of little or no value, regardless of the methods used |
| Report | Quality/strength of evidence and evidence tables | • Several key informants found these elements to be essential and often the most valuable part of the reports |
| Report | Responsibility of reviewers to highlight methodological considerations/limitations | • Reviewers need to help users understand potential ramifications of streamlined methods as end-users may not be aware of standard review steps and accepted methodological approaches |
| Decision | Ability to easily change or reverse a decision | • May be one hallmark of when a rapid product is useful |
| Decision | There is generally more than the evidence of benefits and harms to consider when making a decision | • Rapid products provide one source of information among an array of other considerations for decision-making |