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 Assessing harmful effects in systematic reviews McIntosh HM; Woolacott NF; Bagnall AMBMC Med Res Methodol  2004[Jul]; 4 (ä): 19BACKGROUND: Balanced decisions about health care interventions require reliable  evidence on harms as well as benefits. Most systematic reviews focus on efficacy  and randomised trials, for which the methodology is well established. Methods to  systematically review harmful effects are less well developed and there are few  sources of guidance for researchers. We present our own recent experience of  conducting systematic reviews of harmful effects and make suggestions for future  practice and further research. METHODS: We described and compared the methods  used in three systematic reviews. Our evaluation focused on the review question,  study designs and quality assessment. RESULTS: One review question focused on  providing information on specific harmful effects to furnish an economic model,  the other two addressed much broader questions. All three reviews included  randomised and observational data, although each defined the inclusion criteria  differently. Standard methods were used to assess study quality. Various  practical problems were encountered in applying the study design inclusion  criteria and assessing quality, mainly because of poor study design, inadequate  reporting and the limitations of existing tools. All three reviews generated a  large volume of work that did not yield much useful information for health care  decision makers. The key areas for improvement we identified were focusing the  review question and developing methods for quality assessment of studies of  harmful effects. CONCLUSIONS: Systematic reviews of harmful effects are more  likely to yield information pertinent to clinical decision-making if they address  a focused question. This will enable clear decisions to be made about the type of  research to include in the review. The methodology for assessing the quality of  harmful effects data in systematic reviews requires further development.|*Meta-Analysis as Topic[MESH]|*Research Design[MESH]|Anticonvulsants/*adverse effects/therapeutic use[MESH]|Antipsychotic Agents/*adverse effects/therapeutic use[MESH]|Bupropion/administration & dosage/*adverse effects[MESH]|Delayed-Action Preparations[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Nicotine/*adverse effects/therapeutic use[MESH]|Observation[MESH]|Quality Control[MESH]|Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic[MESH]|Reproducibility of Results[MESH]|Schizophrenia/*drug therapy[MESH]|Smoking Cessation/economics/*methods[MESH]|Treatment Outcome[MESH]
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