Authors
Sandeep Moola, Zachary Munn, Kim Sears, Raluca Sfetcu, Marian Currie, Karolina Lisy, Catalin Tufanaru, Rubab Qureshi, Patrick Mattis, Peifan Mu
Publication date
2015/9/1
Source
JBI Evidence Implementation
Volume
13
Issue
3
Pages
163-169
Publisher
LWW
Description
The systematic review of evidence is the research method which underpins the traditional approach to evidence-based healthcare. There is currently no uniform methodology for conducting a systematic review of association (etiology). This study outlines and describes the Joanna Briggs Institute's approach and guidance for synthesizing evidence related to association with a predominant focus on etiology and contributes to the emerging field of systematic review methodologies. It should be noted that questions of association typically address etiological or prognostic issues.
The systematic review of studies to answer questions of etiology follows the same basic principles of systematic review of other types of data. An a priori protocol must inform the conduct of the systematic review, comprehensive searching must be performed and critical appraisal of retrieved studies must be carried out.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Moola, Z Munn, K Sears, R Sfetcu, M Currie, K Lisy… - JBI Evidence Implementation, 2015