In the last decades, systematic and integrative review studies have occupied important
space in high impact journals. Reviews, in theory, offer the best evidence on certain
topics; are original studies; and do not require approval in Research Ethics Committees
(REC). The need to support practices, especially clinical and educational, in contrast
to the dispensation of the REC, and the limited knowledge of International Centers
Specialized in Revisions guidelines have favored the dissemination of questionable
quality works.In 2017, a published article reported-on the basis of an integrative review using the
Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) method-the gains perceived by health students and
professionals in the use of clinical simulation using dramatization
. These scholars used the term “integrative review”; however, a close examination
of their work reveals that they began it as a “comprehensive review” (using both
quantitative and qualitative questions) and completed it as a rudimentary “scoping
review.”The term “integrative review” has been used loosely, and certain authors have considered
reviews of any kind (including those of variant study designs; such as, experimental,
observational, and descriptive) to be integrative
. However, other authors suggest that integrative review requires a synthesis of
theoretical studies, i.e., something more than mere empirical evidence
. JBI provides formal guidance for ten types of reviews; however, none of them
refer to how an integrative review should be performed
.The systematic reviews of the JBI are based on the model of evidence-based healthcare,
which does not concern exclusively with effectiveness, rather focuses on basing practice
on the best available evidence, and is adaptable to the diverse origins of problems in
health care, using a diverse range of research methodologies to generate evidence
appropriate to the issue
. JBI considers that health professionals require evidence to substantiate a wide
range of activities and interventions, and while making clinical decisions, they must
examine whether their approach is feasible, appropriate, meaningful, and effective
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.JBI systematic reviews are aimed at providing a comprehensive and unbiased synthesis of
large numbers of relevant studies within the confines of a single document by using
rigorous and transparent methods
. Such a systematic review seeks to synthesize and summarize existing knowledge
rather than to create new knowledge
. This produces decision-making that considers the feasibility, appropriateness,
meaningfulness, and effectiveness of healthcare practice
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. The best available evidence, the context in which care is delivered, the
individual patient, and the expertise and professional judgment of the health
professionals play a role in this process
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.Thus, we recommend using JBI methodology to conduct systematic reviews of the following
items: effectiveness, experiential (qualitative), cost/economic evaluation, prevalence
and/or incidence, diagnostic text accuracy, etiology and/or risk, expert opinion/policy,
psychometric, prognostic, and methodology
.The credibility of the knowledge produced and the usefulness of the product generated,
based on the review studies, according to the epidemiological delineations, is closely
related to methodological rigor, an aspect that can be qualified through the guidelines
of the Review Centers.
Authors: Timothy David Tanzer; Thomas Brouard; Samuel Dal Pra; Nicola Warren; Michael Barras; Steve Kisely; Emily Brooks; Dan Siskind Journal: Ther Adv Psychopharmacol Date: 2022-05-24
Authors: Ana Carla Schippert; Ellen Karine Grov; Tone Dahl-Michelsen; Juha Silvola; Bente Sparboe-Nilsen; Stein Ove Danielsen; Mariann Aaland; Ann Kristin Bjørnnes Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2021-11-05 Impact factor: 2.692