Haihua Liu1, Xiaobin Zhou1, Guoyi Yu2, Xiao Sun1. 1. Department of Epidemiology and Health Statistics, School of Public Health, Qingdao University, Qingdao, China. 2. Editorial Board of Acta Medicine Academiae Qingdao University, Qingdao University, Qingdao, China.
Abstract
AIMS: The study aims to evaluate the reporting and methodological quality of systematic reviews and meta-analyses on nursing interventions in the field of heart failure and investigate whether reporting and methodological quality has been improved after PRISMA statement was published. METHODS: Pubmed, Cochrane Database of Systematic Review, and Embase databases were searched from inception of databases to July 31, 2018. Two authors independently extracted data from October 1, 2018, to October 31, 2018. AMSTAR and PRISMA checklists were used to assessed methodological and reporting quality. RESULTS: The 50 English articles satisfied inclusion criteria and were published from 2001 to 2017. After introduction of PRISMA statement, significant improvement in reporting of the following items was found: title, search, risk of bias in individual studies, summary measures, study selection, synthesis of results, summary of evidence for PRISMA checklists, and scientific quality of included studies provided (item 7) for AMSTAR checklists. CONCLUSION: There were higher methodological and reporting quality after publication of PRISMA. We recommend authors, readers, reviewers, and editors to become more acquainted with and to more strictly adhere to the PRISMA and AMSTAR.
AIMS: The study aims to evaluate the reporting and methodological quality of systematic reviews and meta-analyses on nursing interventions in the field of heart failure and investigate whether reporting and methodological quality has been improved after PRISMA statement was published. METHODS: Pubmed, Cochrane Database of Systematic Review, and Embase databases were searched from inception of databases to July 31, 2018. Two authors independently extracted data from October 1, 2018, to October 31, 2018. AMSTAR and PRISMA checklists were used to assessed methodological and reporting quality. RESULTS: The 50 English articles satisfied inclusion criteria and were published from 2001 to 2017. After introduction of PRISMA statement, significant improvement in reporting of the following items was found: title, search, risk of bias in individual studies, summary measures, study selection, synthesis of results, summary of evidence for PRISMA checklists, and scientific quality of included studies provided (item 7) for AMSTAR checklists. CONCLUSION: There were higher methodological and reporting quality after publication of PRISMA. We recommend authors, readers, reviewers, and editors to become more acquainted with and to more strictly adhere to the PRISMA and AMSTAR.
Authors: Luca Fiorillo; Gabriele Cervino; Marco Matarese; Cesare D'Amico; Giovanni Surace; Valeria Paduano; Maria Teresa Fiorillo; Antonio Moschella; Alessia La Bruna; Giovanni Luca Romano; Riccardo Laudicella; Sergio Baldari; Marco Cicciù Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2020-04-30 Impact factor: 3.390
Authors: Isabelle Kaiser; Katharina Diehl; Markus V Heppt; Sonja Mathes; Annette B Pfahlberg; Theresa Steeb; Wolfgang Uter; Olaf Gefeller Journal: Healthcare (Basel) Date: 2022-01-26